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Materials needed:
Round flask, conical bottom flask, Erlenmeyer flask, receiver distilling still, filtering flask,
suction glass funnel, condenser, Pasteur pipette, capillary tube, boiling stone, activated carbon,
hot plate and heat dissipation block.
Chemicals needed:
Procedure:
3. Add 5 mL water, and boiling stone and place a receiver distilling still fitted with a water
cooled condenser. Perform distillation.
4. If two layers are seen, remove lower layer using pastuer pipette.
5. Add 3 drops of distilled liquid to the upper layer and 2 mL of water in test tube. To this add 1
mL of schiffs reagent, mix and observe the color change.
7. Add 1 ml of distilled liquid into the conical bottom flask, place a stopper on top and shake.
Observe for a precipitate and place in ice water bath for few minutes.
9. Crystallize the precipitate from 3 mL ethanol.Filter the crystals obtained by suction filtration,
then wash for a minute with cool ethanol and continue to suction to air dry the crystals.
10. Determine the melting point and compare to its corresponding 2,4-diphenylhydrazone with
other 2,4-diphenylhydrazone listed.
Unknown solution # 1
Transferring upper layer + adding 2 mL water+ 1 mL Schiff reagent in test tube: Distinct pink
color.
Discussion:
To identify organic compounds, direct or indirect experimental methods can be used. For direct
experimental method, the organic compound is identified by determining the melting point,
boiling point, or elemental analysis. For impure substances, indirect experimental methods are
used, and this is done by converting it to the other compound with the reaction that has been
known for a suspected existing functional group. An example of indirect experimental method is,
aldehydes and ketones can be are oxidized to aldehydes and ketones, which can be converted to
corresponding derivatives, which can be defined by direct experimental method. In this
experiment, unknown alcohol was determined by converting to aldehyde or ketone then to 2,4-
diphenylhydrazone derivative. Comparing the melting point of the unknown and comparing it to
the melting point of known 2,4-diphenylhydrazone derivative, the unknown alcohol was
identified.
Conclusion:
In conclusion, the boiling point of the unknown alcohol solution #1 was found to be 78C, and
the alcohol that has a boiling point of 78C is ethanol, therefore the unknown alcohol is ethanol.
When the upper layer of the distilled liquid was added with 2 mL of water in a test tube and
tested with schiffs reagent, there was a distinct pink color which indicates the presence of an
aldehyde. The sulfur in the bisulfate ion of the Schiff reagent acts as a nucleophile and adds to
the carbonyl carbon, and will only add to a sterically unhindered carbonyl. This rewuires that the
carbonyl be part of an aldehyde in which one of the R groups is the very small hydrogen. A
ketone having large groups attached to carbonyl groups will not react with bisulfate.