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Separate the components of "Panacetin" and determine the composition of the mixture
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The Analysis of "Panacetin", Part 1 Fall 201 5
To separate the components of "Panacetin" and determine the composition of the mixture
from mixtures
Organic compounds are usually found as mixtures in everyday life. In our case, you have a
pseudo-‐drug, Panacetin, that is a mixture of three compounds: acetylsalicylic acid (aka aspirin),
acetanilide, and starch. Your task is to separate this mixture into separate pure compounds and
determine the composition of each in the drug.
Organic compounds seldom occur in a pure form, either in nature, in chemical preparations, or in
chemical reaction mixtures. In order to obtain a pure compound from such mixtures, one must
separate it from all other substances present in the mixture. Separation procedures are based on
differences in the physical and chemical properties of the components in the mixture. For
example, two solids having very different solubility in a given liquid can be separated by
filtration; liquids having different boiling points can often be separated by distillation; and acidic
or basic compounds can be separated from neutral substances by extraction into a basic or acidic
medium.
The Analysis of "Panacetin", Part 1 Fall 201 5
Of the three components likely to be present in your sample of Panacetin (aspirin, acetanilide,
and starch), only starch is insoluble in the organic solvent dichloromethane (or methylene
chloride), CH 2 Cl 2. If a sample of Panacetin is dissolved as completely as possible in
dichloromethane, the insoluble starch can be filtered out, leaving acetanilide and aspirin in
solution.
Although the acetanilide and aspirin are both quite insoluble in water at room temperature, the
sodium salt of aspirin is very soluble in water but insoluble in dichloromethane. Because aspirin
is a reasonably strong acid, it can be converted to the salt, sodium acetylsalicylate, by reaction
with the basic sodium hydroxide. Adding a dilute aqueous solution of sodium hydroxide to the
organic solution results in two sharply separated layers. The dichloromethane layer, being more
dense and insoluble in water, will be on the bottom. If the two layers are thoroughly mixed, the
aspirin will react with the sodium hydroxide in the bottom layer and be converted to sodium
acetylsalicylate, which then migrates to the aqueous layer and can be easily separated in a
separatory funnel. Adding some dilute hydrochloric acid to the aqueous solution regenerates
free aspirin as an insoluble white solid; evaporating the solvent from the bottom layer leaves the
acetanilide behind.
Interconversion of Aspirin and its sodium salt
Weigh approximately 4.0 g of Panacetin to the nearest 0.01 g and transfer it to an Erlenmeyer
flask. Measure 75 mL of CH 2 Cl 2 into a graduated cylinder, add it to the solid, and stir the mixture
vigorously using a flat bottomed stirring rod to break up any lumps. When it appears that no
more of the solid will dissolve, filter the mixture by gravity, collect the undissolved solid on the
filter paper, and set it aside to dry. It is advisable to weigh the filter paper beforehand, so that the
weight of the starch can be obtained without transfer.
Transfer the filtrate to a separatory funnel and extract it with two 25 mL portions of aqueous 1M
sodium hydroxide. Drain the organic layer into a tared Erlenmeyer flask and save it for recovery
of acetanilide. Take the combined aqueous extracts in an Erlenmeyer flask, and acidify the
aqueous solution by slow addition, with stirring, of 20 mL of 3 M hydrochloric acid. Make sure
the solution is strongly acidic by testing it with litmus paper. Cool the mixture to room
temperature or below by swirling the flask occasionally in an ice bath. Collect the aspirin by
vacuum filtration (see next page for a picture). Wash the aspirin on the filter with cold distilled
The Analysis of “Panacetin”, Part 2 Fall 2011
To purify the acetanilide isolated in Experiment 1, verify its identity, and assess its purity.
melting point.
organic compounds.
A compound that has been separated from a mixture is seldom ready for immediate analysis or
for applications requiring a pure substance. Contamination may result from a variety of sources:
in the compound after separation.
as an inevitable consequence of the separation procedure used.
Purification of the compound is thus necessary. Chapter 3 of the Making the Connections text is
devoted to the many different purification techniques available for use in the organic chemistry
laboratory. This lab will utilize recrystallization.
o C) is reported to be 3.5 g/100. Calculate the
volume of hot water that should just dissolve all of the acetanilide you recovered from
Experiment 1.
Purify the crude solid saved from the previous experiment Panacetin1 by recrystallizing it from
boiling distilled water. Begin by heating your acetanilide with about half the amount of water
calculated in the Pre-‐lab exercises. Add more hot water if necessary, until all of the solid is in
solution. Use your vacuum filter to isolate your sample, and dry the purified crystals.
The Analysis of “Panacetin”, Part 2 Fall 2011
Obtain melting point ranges of the dry crystals, of an authentic sample of acetanilide, and of a 1:
mixture of the dry crystals with the authentic sample. The melting point of the authentic sample
can be obtained while the crystals are drying. Each melting point should be measured on two
samples-‐more than that if additional practice seems desirable or if the melting points are
imprecise or inaccurate.
Weigh the purified crystals in a tared (pre-‐weighed) vial. Once you have acquired all the data
necessary from your compounds, turn them in as directed by your instructor.
Our new melting point apparatus