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Salting in/out

By analogy, ammonium salts should behave as acids in liquid ammonia, since they produce the cation NH4 (the solvo-cation ), and soluble inorganic amides (for example KNHj, ionic) should act as bases. This idea is borne out by experiment ammonium salts in liquid ammonia react with certain metals and hydrogen is given off. The neutralisation of an ionic amide solution by a solution of an ammonium salt in liquid ammonia can be carried out and followed by an indicator or by the change in the potential of an electrode, just like the reaction of sodium hydroxide with hydrochloric acid in water. The only notable difference is that the salt formed in liquid ammonia is usually insoluble and therefore precipitates. [Pg.90]

Originally, general methods of separation were based on small differences in the solubilities of their salts, for examples the nitrates, and a laborious series of fractional crystallisations had to be carried out to obtain the pure salts. In a few cases, individual lanthanides could be separated because they yielded oxidation states other than three. Thus the commonest lanthanide, cerium, exhibits oxidation states of h-3 and -t-4 hence oxidation of a mixture of lanthanide salts in alkaline solution with chlorine yields the soluble chlorates(I) of all the -1-3 lanthanides (which are not oxidised) but gives a precipitate of cerium(IV) hydroxide, Ce(OH)4, since this is too weak a base to form a chlorate(I). In some cases also, preferential reduction to the metal by sodium amalgam could be used to separate out individual lanthanides. [Pg.441]

Three years after the Breslow report on the large effects of water on the rate of the Diels-Alder reaction, he also demonstrated tliat the endo-exo selectivity of this reaction benefits markedly from employing aqueous media . Based on the influence of salting-in and saltirg-out agents, Breslow pinpoints hydrophobic effects as the most important contributor to the enhanced endo-exo... [Pg.24]

Reaction of free-base porphyrin compounds with iton(II) salts in an appropriate solvent results in loss of the two N—H protons and insertion of iron into the tetradentate porphyrin dianion ligand. Five-coordinate iton(III) porphyrin complexes (hemins), which usually have the anion of the iton(II) salt for the fifth or axial ligand, ate isolated if the reaction is carried out in the presence of air. Iron(II) porphyrin complexes (hemes) can be isolated if the reaction and workup is conducted under rigorously anaerobic conditions. Typically, however, iton(II) complexes are obtained from iton(III) porphyrin complexes by reduction with dithionite, thiolate, borohydtide, chromous ion, or other reducing agents. [Pg.441]

In the production of sodium 3-hydroxy-2,7-naphthaIenedisulfonate/7Jj5 -j5 -J7 (R-salt) (38), 2-naphthol is stirred with excess 98 wt % sulfuric acid at 60°C, sodium sulfate is added, and the mixture is stirred and heated for 36 h at 105—122°C (77). The charge is diluted with water and salted out with ca 15 wt % sodium chloride at 60°C to give R-salt in 68% yield. [Pg.500]

Fast Color Salts. In order to simplify the work of the dyer, diazonium salts, in the form of stable dry powders, were introduced under the name of fast color salts. When dissolved in water they react like ordinary diazo compounds. These diazonium salts, derived from amines, free from solubilizing groups, are prepared by the usual method and are salted out from the solutions as the sulfates, the metallic double salts, or the aromatic sulfonates. The isolated diazonium salt is sold in admixture with anhydrous salts such as sodium sulfate or magnesium sulfate. [Pg.445]

A number of bridged crown ethers have been prepared. Although the Simmons-Park in-out bicyclic amines (see Sect. 1.3.3) are the prototype, Lehn s cryptands (see Chap. 8) are probably better known. Intermediates between the cryptands (which Pedersen referred to as lanterns ) and the simple monoazacrowns are monoazacrowns bridged by a single hydrocarbon strand. Pedersen reports the synthesis of such a structure (see 7, below) which he referred to as a clam compound for the obvious reason . Although Pedersen appears not to have explored the binding properties of his clam in any detail, he did attempt to complex Na and Cs ions. A 0.0001 molar solution of the clam compound is prepared in ethanol. The metal ions Na and Cs are added to the clam-ethanol solutions as salts. Ultraviolet spectra of these solutions indicate that a small amount of the Na is complexed by the clam compound but none of the Cs . [Pg.159]

In other sections in this chapter, we have referred to a variety of macropolycyclic structures which are more elaborate than the simple three-stranded bicyclic cryptands. This includes bridged double-macrocycles " , in-out bicyclic amines and the macrotricyclic quaternary ammonium salts of Schmidtchen. In addition to these, there are two other types of compounds which deserve special note. The first of these is a stacked twin-ring cryptand, but it is a hybrid molecule rather than a double-cryptand . The species shown below as 20 is a crowned porphyrin, and was designed to provide a pair of metal cation binding sites similar to those which might be available in natural biological systems . [Pg.356]

Most reactions are carried out with perchlorates or fluoroborates methylene dichloride is a convenient aprotic solvent for salts with the former anion. Among the various anions, the strongest nucleophile yet reported to give ionized salts (in the case of an isobenzopyrylium salt) is the formate anion (cf. also Section II,B,2,c). [Pg.251]

The arylation of furan by the Gomberg reaction has been carried out using a number of differently substituted diazonium salts. In... [Pg.145]


See other pages where Salting in/out is mentioned: [Pg.932]    [Pg.391]    [Pg.366]    [Pg.533]    [Pg.362]    [Pg.932]    [Pg.391]    [Pg.366]    [Pg.533]    [Pg.362]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.240]    [Pg.587]    [Pg.715]    [Pg.766]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.202]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.233]    [Pg.340]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.202]    [Pg.531]    [Pg.384]    [Pg.2506]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.525]    [Pg.242]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.577]    [Pg.157]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.127]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.247 , Pg.249 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.390 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.29 , Pg.31 , Pg.37 , Pg.46 , Pg.49 , Pg.54 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.247 , Pg.249 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.589 ]




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