In a
2-l. three-necked flask (Note
1), fitted with a
dropping funnel,
condenser (equipped with a Drierite tube), and
efficient stirrer driven by a
powerful motor, is placed a mixture of
600 ml. of benzene,
56 g. (0.85 mole) of 85% potassium hydroxide (Note
2), and
76.4 g. of powdered calcium carbide (Note
3). While this mixture is being stirred vigorously,
85 g. (0.87 mole) of cyclohexanone is added over a period of 0.5–1 hour. The mixture is dark gray and will become warm, but no external cooling is necessary. Stirring is continued, and within 24 hours the contents congeal (Note
4). This semisolid is allowed to stand for an additional 4 days (Note
5).
The flask is immersed in an
ice bath, and a solution containing
200 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid and 200 ml. of water is added cautiously (Note
6) over a period of 4–6 hours. The dark solid is separated by filtration with the aid of a
large Büchner funnel. This impure product is air-dried and digested with
900 ml. of boiling carbon tetrachloride, and the insoluble portion is collected on a Büchner funnel and subsequently extracted with
100 ml. of hot acetone and again filtered. When the filtrates are kept overnight in a
refrigerator,
47.3–50.3 g. (
49–52%) of a colorless crystalline product separates; m.p.
106.5–109°. Partial evaporation of the combined filtrates, followed by effective cooling, gives an additional
7.8–12.9 g. (
8–13%) of
1,1'-ethynylene-bis-cyclohexanol; m.p.
100–109° (Note
7).