Hi, I recently did a lab where I carried out a Diels-Alder reaction with anthracene-9-methanol and N-methylmaleimide, using water as the solvent. Here is the procedure:
https://imgur.com/gallery/VimET. We didn't cover this reaction in lecture yet, so I'm not sure how high a yield one should expect if they did the reaction correctly.
My guess is that it should be pretty high, since this reaction is green and therefore has high atom economy. My % yield, however, was low -- only 35.56%. The main reason I can think of for the low yield is that the mixture may have been heated at too high a temperature (which would cause some starting material to escape from the reaction flask). And, of course, some product tends to be lost during vacuum filtration.
I thought of the possibility that the reflux period was not long enough and that the rxn didn't run to completion, but if that were the case, then my melting point would be far from the literature value (which it isn't -- only a few degrees higher than the literature mp).
Are there any other reasons one could get a high purity but a low yield from a Diels-Alder reaction?