I have recently synthesized 5,6-diethoxybenzimidazole (confirmed by NMR). This was done from the corresponding o-phenylenediamine using formic acid/4M HCl. My first question is in regard to some strange coloration during the reaction. The diamine is very air sensitive and I use it immediately after synthesizing it. The base is a white crystalline solid, but on contact with any acid, it immediately turns purple black. This black color stains the aqueous solution and makes the work up tough. I've not synthesized benzimidazole's before, but I can't find any reference of this kind of behavior. My best guess was the color was given by the diamine's salts being formed in the acid solution, but the reaction goes to completion and the color remains. Does anyone know if this is common behavior in benzimidazole synthesis? I've done the reaction with an orthoformate and catalytic DBDMH and had similar results, albeit the color was less strong.
I am also curious about the acid base behavior of this kind of heterocycle. At low pH, my product precipitates from water. At high pH, it seems to form an insoluble oil as expected. I've tried both collecting the HCl salt through filtration and the base through extraction; neither have given acceptable yields. I am a bit confused as to why salt is precipitating, I sort of expected it to be soluble.
Any advice on the workup for this kind of compound would be much appreciated. I just seem to have a hard time getting it out of the solvent. Should I maybe try making it extremely basic or acidic? If so which one should I try first?