We put NaBr, sulfuric acid, and 1-butanol into a round bottom flask and heated under reflux for 40 minutes. Then, we put the crude product into deionized water and stirred for 15 minutes. The product was pipetted out, dried with sodium sulfate, then weighed.
Oh, and no, bromobutane is not appreciably soluble in water. So stir all you want and it won't go in any more than a tiny fraction.
That's what I thought, but several TA's were saying that the product dissolved. The flask of water and crude bromobutane was stirred on the same hot plate used for reflux, so would the residual heat make a substantial difference?
Other reasons I've come up with are side reactions and that not all of the reactants actually reacted. I can't imagine that either of those would account for so much product loss though.