I realize that mastering TLC is a fairly basic skill for organic chemists. In reality, I consider myself somewhat competent in the practice. A recent reaction really has me stumped though. Here is the scenario.
I am synthesizing 1-chloro-3-phenylpropane from the corresponding acid via thionyl chloride. I've done many chlorinations with thionyl chloride and this one seemed to be proceeding as expected. TLCs I've taken have been a bit confusing though. I have a reagent grade sample of the compound I am synthesizing, so I am using it as a reference in my TLCs.
The strange thing is, the pure sample produces two distinct spots on the TLC. The spot with the lower RF corresponds exactly to a spot in the lane containing material from my reaction flask. The odd thing is, the RF seems a bit low for a rather non-polar halide. The solvent system I am using is 8:2 hexanes/EtoAc.
I originally thought I might have produced an aldehyde instead of the halide, but I have confirmed this is not true.
Is there any reason a compound such as 1-chloro-3-phenylpropane might be expected to produce two spots on TLC? I really can't understand why this is happening. The product is very new, I was actually the first to open it. Additionally, I have taken every precaution to avoid contamination in the process of running the TLC. Every time I have used clean vials, fresh capillaries, and very new ethyl acetate to dilute it.
I realize this question is a bit "out there" but any input would be appreciated. I'll be running an NMR tomorrow to ID what was produced, but I am just baffled by the behavior of my reference compound!