I am doing a lab project in which I am synthesizing an organic ligand to make molecular Borromean rings.
This is the actual compound I am trying to make -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molecular_Borromean_ringsThe first reaction is oxidation of 2,2'-bipyridine to make the N,N'-dioxide. I have found a couple of publications on how to do it. Peracetic acid is one way and the mixture of acetic acid/H2O2 is the other, which as far as I get is the same because the second method generates the peracetic acid in situ.
The real problem is the isolation/purification part. The remaining Peracetic acid, acetic acid, H2O2 and H2O can all be distilled away, hopefully without blowing it all up
But the N,N'-dioxide would still be as acetic salt, right? In analogous reaction with pyridine n-oxide (from orgsyn.org) they distilled it under 1mmHg to remove the associated acetic acid. But this would most likely not be possible with bipyridine.
Could it be as simple as neutralization with Na2CO3 or NaHCO3 and then recrystallization from water?
This is my first practical experience with N-oxides so any suggestions are welcome.