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My attempts at 4mmc synthesis have been plagued with a similar problem - during acidification, after adding just few drops of HCl, the mixture turns black. Well, black is not precise, it's either green or blue. But so dark that it appears black. Only after diluting the liquid by a large factor you can see the actual color. After adding more HCl the mixture reaches pH 5 (approximately) and the 4-MMC.HCl precipitates. Some product can be usually salvaged but it takes a lot of time and acetone to wash as much color from the precipitate as possible, and then repeatedly recrystallize and wash the crystals with more acetone to purify the product. I attach two photos from two batches to show what the problem looks like.
I always pay close attention during the flushing of free base and the resulting organic layer is free of any smell of methylamine. In my last attempt I tried to super-cool everything entering the acidification step: the HCl, the free base, the acetone, everything was freezer-cold at -18 °C, but the free base diluted by acetone turned black with about the fifth drop of HCl.
My suspicion that there is unreacted bk4 in the free base and I will focus on fixing this in my next attempt. I welcome any advice in what I can try and focus on that would explain my past problems.
I always pay close attention during the flushing of free base and the resulting organic layer is free of any smell of methylamine. In my last attempt I tried to super-cool everything entering the acidification step: the HCl, the free base, the acetone, everything was freezer-cold at -18 °C, but the free base diluted by acetone turned black with about the fifth drop of HCl.
My suspicion that there is unreacted bk4 in the free base and I will focus on fixing this in my next attempt. I welcome any advice in what I can try and focus on that would explain my past problems.
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here we do see impuirities that are the result of improper technique earlier, it shouldnt be blacjk when acidified and left out of freezer
probably its some of reaction problems, bad acetone quality, or not proper quality of 2b4m
simply test at least melting point of of 2b4m.
probably its some of reaction problems, bad acetone quality, or not proper quality of 2b4m
simply test at least melting point of of 2b4m.
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My acetone is top notch, I stand by it. However, these photos come from batches cooked with very improvised equipment - no external heat and only a very weak magnetic stirrer. It is quite likely that I ended the reaction too early given its temperature and there was unreacted bk4 left in the RM.
The bk4 itself was not of the highest quality possible but it was not terrible to be the cause of the colored mess shown above. With some upgraded equipment I was able to run a full reaction (in EA, heated to 50-55 °C, total 30 min) and the acidification finally worked as expected - I got nice white precipitate and no change of color of the RM. Below photo is filtration after acidification. The color of the separated liquid is clear and bright (previously it was all black) and the paste is almost snow-white.
Sadly, the last batch used all my remaining bk4 so I'm unable to test it anymore. But the success of the last batch confirms to me that the problem was not in my bk4.
The bk4 itself was not of the highest quality possible but it was not terrible to be the cause of the colored mess shown above. With some upgraded equipment I was able to run a full reaction (in EA, heated to 50-55 °C, total 30 min) and the acidification finally worked as expected - I got nice white precipitate and no change of color of the RM. Below photo is filtration after acidification. The color of the separated liquid is clear and bright (previously it was all black) and the paste is almost snow-white.
Sadly, the last batch used all my remaining bk4 so I'm unable to test it anymore. But the success of the last batch confirms to me that the problem was not in my bk4.