While your benzoic acid dries, you'll practice refluxing tetrahydrofuran, or THF, which has a boiling point of 66 °C. THF is volatile, flammable, and an irritant, so avoid letting it touch your skin and always work with it in a fume hood. Refluxing is a technique that constantly condenses the vapor and returns it to the flask. This allows reactions to be performed at high temperatures, such as at the solvent's boiling point, without losing the solvent to evaporation.
Refluxing is achieved with a special piece of glassware called a condenser, which is attached directly to your flask. The condenser is cooled with water flowing through the outer chamber. As vapor rises through the condenser, it loses heat to the cool walls, condenses, and drips back into the flask.
Refluxing is usually performed in a round-bottom flask. These flasks must be heated in a heating bath or with specialized equipment, but they provide more even heating than an Erlenmeyer flask or beaker as a result. Water baths are typically used for experiments performed below 80 – 100 °C.
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Set up the glassware and equipment for reflux. Place a lab jack by your available lab stand and set a stirring hotplate on top of it. Clamp a 50-mL round-bottom flask at least 12 cm above the hotplate.
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Bring a 50-mL graduated cylinder to the solvent hood and measure 25 mL of THF. If you pour too much, label a small beaker ‘organic waste’ and pipette the excess into that. Remember to cap the bottle when you're done.
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Carefully pour the THF into the round-bottom flask, clean up any spills with a lab wipe or paper towel, and add a small oblong stir bar to the flask.
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Position a medium clamp ~20 cm above the flask. Obtain a condenser and apply vacuum grease to the lower ground-glass joint.
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Fit the condenser into the flask and rotate them in opposite directions until the vacuum grease is evenly spread between the two ground-glass surfaces.
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Clamp the condenser in place and use a lab wipe to remove excess grease from the connection between the two pieces of glassware.
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Attach rubber tubing to each of the ports on the condenser. Place the free end of the tubing connected to the top port, which is the outlet, in the drain. Connect the free end of the tubing from the bottom port, which is the inlet, to the waterline.
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Fill a 250-mL beaker with ~200 mL of tap water and place this water bath on the hotplate. Use the lab jack to raise the bath until the water level is about 2/3 of the way up the spherical part of the flask. This will ensure the THF heats evenly.
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Secure a thermometer (range 0 – 100 °C) in the bath using the thermometer clamp.
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Slowly open the water tap, watch the condenser for leaks as it fills, and confirm that the water is flowing into the drain.
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Slowly turn up the magnetic stirrer until the THF is stirring well. If the stir bar bounces around, turn down the stir motor and try again more slowly.
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Start heating the water bath to about 70 °C until the THF starts to boil. Note: You'll see vapor condensing in the lower part of the condenser).
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Monitor the refluxing THF for 10 min. Note: Turn down the heat if the bath goes above 70 °C or if vapor leaves the condenser.
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After 10 min, remove the thermometer and turn off the heat and the stir motor. Carefully lower the lab jack until the flask is clear of the water bath. Wait at least 10 more min for the setup to cool, then unplug and remove the hotplate.
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Turn off the water tap, unclamp the condenser, and carefully detach it from the flask. Tilt the condenser until most of the water has flowed through the outlet tubing into the drain. Then, disconnect the inlet tubing from the condenser and let the remaining water flow into the drain. Do the same for the outlet tubing.
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Use lab wipes to remove the vacuum grease from the condenser and the flask, then retrieve the stir bar from the flask.
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Bring the flask to the waste hood and empty it into the non-halogenated organic waste container. Pour any excess HCl or THF into the acid and organic wastes, respectively. Empty the ice and water baths into the sink and rinse the beakers with tap water.
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Clean most of your other glassware while the benzoic acid from earlier finishes drying according to your lab’s standard practices. Usually, you'll rinse your glassware both with an organic solvent, like acetone, and with detergent and deionized water. Note: Your lab may have specific procedures for glassware used with acids. If so, follow that procedure to clean the graduated cylinder used with HCl and your acid waste beaker, if applicable.
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Remove the reusable pipette bulbs and dispose of your pipettes in the glass waste container. Throw out used lab wipes and paper towels in the lab trash.
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Check on your benzoic acid. If it is dry, turn off the vacuum and break the vacuum seal by disconnecting the tubing from the filter flask. Gently place the funnel in it 250-mL beaker and bring it and your lab notebook to the balance.
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Tare a weighing boat and use a clean spatula to transfer the product to the weighing boat. Record the mass of your product in your lab notebook.
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Then, put the product in the lab trash and wipe off the spatula. Dispose of the filtrate in the aqueous waste container.
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Clean the rest of your glassware, throw out the filter paper and other waste in the lab trash, and put away your lab equipment. Lastly, clean the floor of your fume hood with a damp paper towel.