im not sure about the acid catalyst because while doing the experiment, only o-phenylenediamine and formic acid are mixed and heated on water bath for 2 hours. and then naoh added to make it alkaline(to remove the unreacted formic acid)...
what is 4A molecular sieves??
how come in your paragraph 3, i'll end up with diol attached to amine?
Sorry I explained that a bit poorly.
Ok, do you use excess formic acid? Since this is an acid, if it is used in excess it may act as the acid catalyst itself (one molecule protonates another to make it more reactive).
At what point do you add the NaOH? If it is at the end of the reaction as part of the work up you are probably just neutralising the acid and the NaOH doesnt take part in the reaction itself.
4A molecular sieves basically absorb water. So you add them to reactions where any water can cause side reactions or reverse your reaction. It absorbs the water and pushes the reaction towards the products. (If you have ever dried something with MgSO
4 it is the same principle.
The "diol attached to the amine" is the third molecule you have drawn, I wrote that poorly sorry. So you end up with the molecule with two hydroxyl groups on it that are bonded to the carbon, which is then bonded to the NH. That configuration of atoms is perfect for a protonated OH (ie water) to be lost as a leaving group and a double bond to be formed. You see that kind of mechanism very often in carbonyl chemistry.
Does that make a little more sense?