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Topic: best solvent for extracting phenol out of an aqueous solution  (Read 4121 times)

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Offline Babcock_Hall

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We are attempting to synthesize ornithine δ-isonicotinate, in which the pyridinium nitrogen is connected to carbon-5 of a group derived from pentanoic acid.  Under our conditions (1 eq. of trifluoroacetic acid and 20 equivalents of phenol), I expect our product to have two positive charges and for both carboxylic acids to be neutral.  We would like to extract away the majority of the phenol before further purification by ion exchange chromatography.  We have been searching through the literature for a good choice in extraction solvents.  The solvent should remove the phenol but leave our product in the aqueous phase.  We found one paper (Jabrou, Research Journal of Chemical Sciences, Vol. 2(4), 1-12, April (2012)) that recommended 2-butatone and isobutyl acetate as good solvents (http://www.isca.in/rjcs/Archives/vol2/i4/1.ISCA-RJCS-2012-001%20Done.pdf).  We also found a patent (US4160111 A) that mostly discussed fractional distillation but also discussed liquid-liquid extractions.  The author (DF Strahorn) of this patent suggested mixtures of 2-butanone and benzene or alkylated benzenes were more effective than either solvent alone (http://www.google.com/patents/US4160111): 

"In a series of runs which were carried out under ambient conditions, that is, at a temperature of about 22° C. and a pressure of 1 atmosphere, the phenol partition coefficients for water and a series of ketone-modified hydrocarbon extracting phases were determined. The extracting phases used in these examples were benzene and a benzene solution containing a range of 2-butanone contents. The results from these runs are shown in FIG. 1. These results illustrate that while benzene or 2-butanone individually exhibit phenol partition coefficients of the relatively low order, for example, of less than about 3 or 5, mixtures of benzene and 2-butanone exhibit, in the partition of phenol between water and the organic extracting medium, partition coefficients which are exceptional. From FIG. 1 it is notable that the addition of but a minor amount of 2-butanone, for example, as little as 10 weight percent, to benzene about doubles the partition coefficient. The coefficient for a 50/50 mixture, relative to that for benzene alone, is larger by about a factor of 20! Similar and advantageous results obtained when lower alkyl substituted benzenes as described above are used in place of benzene and when other ketones as defined above are used in place of 2-butanone. These organic mixtures are also especially suitable for use as the organic mixture which is introduced to the fractionating column of the process herein."

Obviously we would avoid benzene.  Right now I am leaning toward 2-butanone on the basis of simplicity, and maybe trying 40/60 2-butanone/toluene if a great deal of phenol is left in the aqueous phase when 2-butanone is used alone.

Offline Hunter2

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Re: best solvent for extracting phenol out of an aqueous solution
« Reply #1 on: June 10, 2014, 01:12:55 AM »
Can you add Hydroxide or Carbonat to convert Phenol to Phenolate, which is solouble in water? Not sure about your product containing carboxylgroups?

Offline opsomath

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Re: best solvent for extracting phenol out of an aqueous solution
« Reply #2 on: June 10, 2014, 08:50:29 AM »
Hate to be Captain Obvious, but could you just freeze-dry the whole thing and then take it back up in water when the phenol all volatilizes?

If I were doing this with stuff I have in the lab, I'd probably use chloroform or ethyl acetate. Your 2-butanone route sounds plausible as well.

Offline Babcock_Hall

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Re: best solvent for extracting phenol out of an aqueous solution
« Reply #3 on: June 10, 2014, 09:37:56 AM »
Hunter,

We expect our product to be in the aqueous phase, and we are trying to coax the phenol into organic.  If we add hydroxide, I predict that both the product and phenol will become more water-soluble.

opsomath,

I was unaware that phenol was volatile enough to be removed by lyophilization.  That is a tempting idea.  I think I would go with isobutyl acetate (if I had some) or propyl acetate over ethyl acetate because I am unsure how soluble the product might be in ethyl acetate.  My OP was a little unclear, but phenol is the scavenger for the para-methoxybenzyl cation, and TFA is a catalyst in the deprotection of this ester.
« Last Edit: June 10, 2014, 09:56:03 AM by Babcock_Hall »

Offline opsomath

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Re: best solvent for extracting phenol out of an aqueous solution
« Reply #4 on: June 10, 2014, 10:32:45 AM »
Now that I've googled a bit, I can't find clear support for removing phenol with lyophilization one way or another, but it is certainly hard to resist trying. If it doesn't come out, then maybe you could wash the phenol out of the solid.

Phenol seems to have about half the vapor pressure of DMSO at a given temperature, and DMSO can be removed by an efficient high vacuum with a cold trap. Maybe that would work in combination - first lyophilize, then throw the whole thing under 50-100 mTorr vacuum and go get a sandwich.

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