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Potassium iodide starch paper

To ensure the presence of a slight excels of nitrous acid, potassium iodide-starch paper is sometimes used as an external indicator, a drop of the solution being removed from time to time during the addition of the sodium nitrite, and then dropped on to the paper. When an excess of nitrous acid is present, iodine is liberated, and gives the familiar... [Pg.183]

The experimental conditions necessary for the preparation of a solution of a diazonium salt, diazotisation of a primary amine, are as follows. The amine is dissolved in a suitable volume of water containing 2 5-3 equivalents of hydrochloric acid (or of sulphuric acid) by the application of heat if necessary, and the solution is cooled in ice when the amine hydrochloride (or sulphate) usually crystallises. The temperature is maintained at 0-5°, an aqueous solution of sodium nitrite is added portion-wise until, after allowing 3-4 minutes for reaction, the solution gives an immediate positive test for excess of nitrous acid with an external indicator—moist potassium iodide - starch paper f ... [Pg.590]

Dissolve 20 g, (19 -6 ml.) of anihne in a mixture of 55 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid (1) and 55 ml. of water contained in a 350 ml, conical flask. Place a thermometer in the solution and immerse the flask in a bath of crushed ice (2) cool until the temperature of the stirred solution falls below 5°, Dissolve 16 g. of sodium nitrite in 75 ml. of water and chUl the solution by immersion in the ice bath add the sodium nitrite solution (3) in small volumes (2-3 ml. at a time) to the cold anihne hydrochloride solution, and keep the latter weh stirred with the thermometer. Heat is evolved by the reaction. The temperature should not be allowed to rise above 10° (add a few grams of ice to the reaction mixture if necessary) otherwise appreciable decomposition of the diazonium compound and of nitrous acid wih occur. Add the last 5 per cent, of the sodium nitrite solution more slowly (say, about 1 ml. at a time) and, after stirring for 3-4 minutes, test a drop of the solution diluted with 3-4 drops of water with potassium iodide - starch paper (4) if no immediate blue colour... [Pg.598]

Dissolve 36 g. of p-toluidine in 85 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid and 85 ml. of water contained in a 750 ml. conical flask or beaker. Cool the mixture to 0° in an ice-salt bath with vigorous stirring or shaking and the addition of a httle crushed ice. The salt, p-toluidine hydrochloride, will separate as a finely-divided crystalline precipitate. Add during 10-15 minutes a solution of 24 g. of sodium nitrite in 50 ml. of water (1) shake or stir the solution well during the diazotisation, and keep the mixture at a temperature of 0-5° by the addition of a httle crushed ice from time to time. The hydrochloride wUl dissolve as the very soluble diazonium salt is formed when ah the nitrite solution has been introduced, the solution should contain a trace of free nitrous acid. Test with potassium iodide - starch paper (see Section IV,60). [Pg.600]

Dissolve 46-5 g. (45-5 ml.) of aniUne in a mixture of 126 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid and 126 ml. of water contained in a 1-htre beaker. Cool to 0-5° in a bath of ice and salt, and add a solution of 36-5 g. of sodium nitrite in 75 ml. of water in small portions stir vigorously with a thermometer (1) and maintain the temperature below 10°, but preferably at about 5° by the addition of a httle crushed ice if necessary. The diazotisation is complete when a drop of the solution diluted with 3-4 drops of water gives an immediate blue colouration with potassium iodide - starch paper the test should be performed 3-4 minutes after the last addition of the nitrite solution. Prepare a solution of 76 g. of sodium fluoborate (2) in 150 ml. of water, cool, and add the chilled solution slowly to the diazonium salt solution the latter must be kept well stirred (1) and the temperature controlled so that it is below 10°. Allow to stand for 10 minutes with frequent stirring. Filter... [Pg.609]

Dissolve 34 g. of o-nitroaniline in a warm mixture of 63 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid and 63 ml. of water contained in a 600 ml. beaker. Place the beaker in an ice - salt bath, and cool to 0-5° whilst stirring mechanically the o-nitroaniline hydrochloride will separate in a finely-divided crystalline form. Add a cold solution of 18 g. of sodium nitrite in 40 ml. of water slowly and with stirring to an end point with potassium iodide - starch paper do not allow the temperature to rise above 5-7 . Introduce, whilst stirring vigorously, a solution of 40 g. of sodium borofluoride in 80 ml. of water. Stir for a further 10 minutes, and filter the solid diazonium fluoborate with suction on a sintered glass funnel. Wash it immediately once with 25 ml. of cold 5 per cent, sodium borofluoride solution, then twice with 15 ml. portions of rectified (or methylated) spirit and several times with ether in each washing stir... [Pg.612]

Add 101 g. (55 ml.) of concentrated sulphuric acid cautiously to 75 ml. of water contained in a 1 htre beaker, and introduce 35 g. of finely-powdered wi-nitroaniline (Section IV,44). Add 100-150 g. of finely-crushed ice and stir until the m-nitroaniUne has been converted into the sulphate and a homogeneous paste results. Cool to 0-5° by immersion of the beaker in a freezing mixture, stir mechanically, and add a cold solution of 18 g. of sodium nitrite in 40 ml. of water over a period of 10 minutes until a permanent colour is immediately given to potassium iodide - starch paper do not allow the temperature to rise above 5-7° during the diazotisation. Continue the stirring for 5-10 minutes and allow to stand for 5 minutes some m-nitrophenjddiazonium sulphate may separate. Decant the supernatant Uquid from the solid as far as possible. [Pg.614]

Place 130 ml. of concentrated hj drochloric acid in a 1 - 5 litre round-bottomed flask, equipped ith a mechanical stirrer and immersed in a freezing mixture of ice and salt. Start the stirrer and, when the temperature has fallen to about 0°, add 60 g. of finely-crushed ice (1), run in 47 5 g. (46 5 ml.) of pure aniline during about 5 minutes, and then add another 60 g. of crushed ice. Dissolve 35 g. of sodium nitrite in 75 ml. of water, cool to 0-3°, and run in the cold solution from a separatory funnel, the stem of which reaches nearly to the bottom of the flask. During the addition of the nitrite solution (ca. 20 minutes), stir vigorously and keep the temperature as near 0° as possible by the frequent addition of crushed ice. There should be a slight excess of nitrous acid (potassium iodide-starch paper test) at the end of 10 minutes after the last portion of nitrite is added. [Pg.636]

An alternative method of removing the aniline is to add 30 ml. of concentrated sulphuric acid carefully to the steam distillate, cool the solution to 0-5°, and add a concentrated solution of sodium nitrite until a drop of the reaction mixture colours potassium iodide - starch paper a deep blue instantly. As the diazotisation approaches completion, the reaction becomes slow it will therefore be necessary to teat for excess of nitrous acid after an interval of 5 minutes, stirring all the whUe. About 12 g. of sodium nitrite are usually required. The diazotised solution is then heated on a boiling water bath for an hour (or until active evolution of nitrogen ceases), treated with a solution of 60 g. of sodium hydroxide in 200 ml. of water, the mixture steam-distilled, and the quinoline isolated from the distillate by extrsM-tion with ether as above. [Pg.829]

Kabum-jodid, n. potassium iodide, -jodidlo-sung, /. potassium iodide solution, -jodid-st ke, /. potassium iodide starch, -jodid-starkepapier, n. potassium iodide starch paper, -kobaltnitrit, n. potassium cobalti-nitrite. -kohlenoxyd,n. potassium carboxide, potassium hexacarbonyl. -nitrat, n. potassium nitrate. [Pg.233]

The reduction of thallium(III) to thallium(I) may be followed with potassium iodide-starch paper. A drop of solution is placed on the... [Pg.75]

It is advisable to test the potassium iodide - starch paper with acidified sodium nitrite solution the commercial test paper is, particularly if it has been kept for a considerable period, sometimes almost useless. The solution must con-taiii an excess of acid at all times, t.e., it must give a blue colour on Congo red paper. [Pg.599]

Lead tetraacetate is added in small quantities, with stirring, to an ice-cold suspension of 11 g. of ethyl 3-(D-arabino-tetrahydroxybutyl)-5-methyl 4-furoate in 100 ml. of benzene plus 40 ml. of glacial acetic acid. Addition is stopped when there is a positive reaction with potassium iodide-starch paper. The mixture is stirred for a further ten minutes, filtered, and the benzene solution washed twice with water. The benzene layer is then dried with anhydrous sodium sulfate, filtered, and the filtrate evaporated to dryness. The residue (6 g.) is mixed with a solution of 7.5 g. of sodium hydroxide plus 20 g. of silver nitrate in 40 ml. of water, and heated for 40 minutes on a steam bath. The aqueous solution is filtered, acidified to Congo Red while being cooled with ice, and the crystals formed are removed by filtration, washed with ice-cold water, and dried over phosphorus pentoxide in the vacuum desiccator yield, 2.2 g. After recrystallization from water, the product has m. p. 234r-235°. [Pg.130]

Test papers. Litmus, blue and red, turmeric, Congo. Potassium iodide-starch paper. [Pg.91]

In diazotisation the addition of nitrite is controlled by means of potassium iodide-starch paper. When the reaction is complete the paper should become blue, but the excess of nitrite should be as small as possible. It should be remembered that diazotisation is not an ionic reaction, but requires time especially towards the end a few minutes must elapse before the test is made. [Pg.283]

While the cuprous cyanide solution is warmed gently (to 60°-70°) on the water bath, a solution of p-tolyldiazonium chloride is prepared as follows Heat 20 g. of p-toluidine with a mixture of 50 g. of concentrated hydrochloric acid and 150 c.c. of water until dissolution is complete. Immerse the solution in ice-water and stir vigorously with a glass rod so that the toluidine hydrochloride separates as far as possible in a microcrystalline form. Then cool the mixture in ice and diazotise with a solution of 16 g. of sodium nitrite in 80 c.c. of water, added until the nitrous acid test with potassium iodide-starch paper persists. The diazonium chloride solution so obtained is poured during the course of about ten minutes into the warm cuprous cyanide solution, which is meanwhile shaken frequently. After the diazo-solution has been added the reaction mixture is heated under an air condenser on the water bath fox a further quarter of an hour, and then the toluic nitrile is separated by distillation with steam (fume chamber, HCN ). The nitrile (which passes over as a yellowish oil) is extracted from the distillate with ether, the p-cresol produced as a by-product is removed by shaking the ethereal extract twice with 2 A-sodium hydroxide solution, the ether is evaporated,... [Pg.291]

Experiment.—In order to show that this formation of aromatic nitrosamines is reversible, boil a small amount of the pure compound just prepared in xylene and hold a piece of moist potassium iodide-starch paper over the mouth of the tube. [Pg.358]

A 5.5 M solution of bromine in dichloromethane is added dropwise to a vigorously stirred mixture of 19.1 g. (0.097 mole) of hydrazine 1, 75 ml. of dichloromethane, 75 ml. of water, and 22 g. (0.262 mole) of sodium bicarbonate in a 250-ml. flask, until a persistent, positive potassium iodide-starch paper test is obtained (Note 8). Excess bromine is then discharged with aqueous sodium sulfite, and the phases are separated. The aqueous phase is extracted with two 50-ml. portions of dichloromethane, and the combined organic extracts are washed with 30 ml. of water, dried over magnesium sulfate, filtered, concentrated using a rotary evaporator, and distilled to afford 17.3 g. (93% yield) of the diazene 2 as a clear, bright yellow oil, b.p. 95-97° (0.2 mm.) (Note 7). [Pg.102]

The Abel heat test (heating at a temperature of 75-80°C in the presence of standard potassium iodide-starch paper). [Pg.558]


See other pages where Potassium iodide starch paper is mentioned: [Pg.606]    [Pg.607]    [Pg.613]    [Pg.624]    [Pg.625]    [Pg.648]    [Pg.960]    [Pg.245]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.170]    [Pg.174]    [Pg.815]    [Pg.606]    [Pg.607]    [Pg.613]    [Pg.624]    [Pg.625]    [Pg.648]    [Pg.960]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.358]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.137 , Pg.138 ]




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