Hi. I've been scratching my head trying to solve a problem and was hoping someone more experienced could help.
I recently performed an experiment to create the protected phosphine of chloro-bis-diethylaminophosphine [(Et2N)2PCl]. The reaction involved adding PCl3 and diethylamine in a solution of hexanes within N2 flowing through the vessel, filtering out the precipitate, which I believe to be [Et2NH2]Cl and then removing the solvent by rotovap. I had a good looking solution going into the rotovap, but afterwards there was no solution left, only a yellow solid lining the edge of the flask.
The solid seemed damp so I removed what I could using a pipette pressed against the bottom of the flask but after the vacuum distillation, no product was attained, even after going well beyond the 120C that was needed.
Now I'm certain no product was lost in the rotovap because the temperature/pressure were such that it could not have boiled off as well as the receiver flask did not turn yellow like it would have. The solution going into the rotovap also looked good. The experiment used stochiometry to make it di-substituted.
I'm wondering, what happened and what was the solid lining the flask?
My TA couldn't figure it out. They went to perform NMR on the PCl3 but that turned out to be pure. Was it the exposure to air? Any ideas?
Thank you,
Rycus