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6.6C: Using Solvents Other Than Water

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    489781
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    This section describes a few key differences between a crystallization using water and one using volatile organic solvents. It is expected that readers have previously read or performed a crystallization using water as the solvent.

    Ethanol, Methanol, Ethyl Acetate, and Hexanes

    Ethanol, methanol, ethyl acetate, and hexanes are flammable and have moderate volatility, thus these solvents necessitate some different approaches than when using water as the crystallization solvent.

    Figure 3.54: a) Hotplate set to low (for ethanol), b+c) Adding solvent via pipette, d) Crystallizing atop some paper towels to encourage slow cooling.
    1. Although a steam bath is the preferred heat source for these solvents, if a hotplate is chosen to be used carefully it's essential that you:
      1. Keep the hotplate on low (Figure 3.54a) and monitor the temperature of the solvent with a thermometer, being sure to patiently wait for the solvent to come to a boil instead of "cranking" up the heat.
      2. Use the hotplate in a fume hood to prevent a "blanket" of solvent vapors from forming around the hotplate, which have the potential to ignite.
      3. Monitor the hotplate the entire time while the solvent is heating.
    2. It may be more controllable to use a pipette to transfer portions of hot solvent to the solid instead of pouring (Figure 3.54b+c). Pouring has a greater possibility of spilling, and if solvent drips onto the hotplate surface, it has the potential to ignite. Since solvent tends to cool in a pipette, care must be taken to be sure the solution is returned to a boil before adding more solvent.
    3. All organic solvents have lower heat capacities than water, so tend to cool more quickly. Be sure to set the cooling sample atop several paper towels to encourage a slow crystallization (Figure 3.54d).

    This page titled 6.6C: Using Solvents Other Than Water is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Lisa Nichols via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.