"If you hydrolyse phenyl salicylate with NaOH you get phenol and salicylic acid sodium salt. You need a stronger acid than CO2 to re-generate the salicylic acid, something like HCl."
You are right, I checked the pKa of salicylic acid and it is an almost strong one, so the conjugate base is very weak, meaning that water isn't able to donate its proton to it easily.
I got the following questions now that I can't understand:
1.On the wikkipedia link you gave is said that a mixture of bromobenzene and water boils on a lower temperature that those two separately. What effect causes this?
2.If NaOH was added to phenyl-salicylate, there should be Na-phenolate present, too, but it is a strong base so it hydrolises rapidly. Is this correct?
3.The compound in the picture I gave is in the answer the substance that left in the vessel. Are the oxygen atoms missing because of an error (in typing), or that substance was really made in the process?