I'm trying Reformatsky reactions at the moment but I'm having alot of problems seemingly with the generation of the Reformatsky reagent.
The literature procedure I'm following is as follows:
Zinc powder (1 eq) and 0.1 eq CuCl is suspended in dry THF and heated at reflux for 30 min under Ar in dried apparatus.
The reaction mixture is then taken off the heat, and 1 eq tert-butylbromoacetate is added at a rate that maintains a gentle reflux.
Once things calm down, heating is resumed for a further hour.
At this point, the literature describes a green solution. I obtained a green solution the first time I attempted this reaction, and the reagent worked well on my substrate.
However, on repeating this, I always end up with a colourless solution with a purple-ish sort of burgandy precipitate. Adding my substrate to this does result in the desired reaction to some extent, but side products are more prominent and yields are extremely low.
Could this be a moisture problem? The anhydrous THF might not be so anhydrous any more, for the first attempt it was from a new bottle, but it's now been open for a few days - I always remove the THF under Ar, but I have caught the masters students withdrawing solvent without doing this. The air humidity has also rocketed over the last couple of days.
I can't think of what this purple precipitate is. Anyone got any thoughts?