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See also: hydrocarbon; the first homologue of See also: benzene
.
Discovered by Pelletier (See also: Ann. shim. plays., 1838, 67, p
.
269) in the oil obtained in the manufacture of See also: gas from the resin of Pinus maritima, and named retinnaphte, it was prepared from the same gas by Couerbe (ibid., 69, p
.
184) and named heptacarbure quadrihydrique, C7H4 (C = 6); Sainte-Claire Deville (ibid
.
1841 [3] 3, p
.
168) obtained it by distilling Tolu balsam, naming it benzoene, and Glenard and Bouldault obtained a substance by the dry See also: distillation of dragon's See also: blood which they called dracyl
.
The See also: complete identity of these substances was established by A
.
W
.
See also: Hofmann and See also: Muspratt, and they adopted the name toluol (anglicized to See also: toluene), which was proposed by See also: Berzelius
.
Its derivatives and its relation to benzene had been previously studied by the above and other experimenters, its relation to benzene being first proved experimentally by See also: Cannizzaro and its constitution
settled by See also: Fittig and Tollens's synthesis from sodium and a mixture of methyl iodide and brombenzene
.
The hydrocarbon occurs in See also: wood-See also: tar and in petroleum, and is prepared commercially by fractional distillation of the See also: light oil fraction of the See also: coal-tar distillate (see COAL TAR)
.
It may be obtained synthetically by Fittig and Tollens's method (above) ; by See also: Friedel and Craft's See also: process, devised in 1897, of acting with aluminium chloride on a mixture of benzene and methyl chloride; this reaction leads to the production of higher homologues which may, however, break down under the continued See also: action of the aluminium chloride; or by See also: heating the toluene carboxylic acids obtained by oxidizing the higher homologues of benzene
.
It forms a colourless See also: mobile liquid, boiling at 110.3° C. and having a specific gravity of 0.8708 (13.1/4°)
.
It is insoluble in See also: water, but dissolves readily in See also: alcohol and See also: ether
.
On reduction it yields hexahydrotoluene; oxidation with dilute nitric acid or chromic acid gives benzoic acid; whilst chromyl chloride and water give benzaldehyde
.
On nitration it gives ortho- and para-nitrotoluenes—which on reduction yield the valuable toluidines, See also: C6H4(See also: CH3)(See also: NH2)—and on sulphonation the parasulphonic acid is formed with a little of the ortho acid
.
Chlorination in the cold gives ortho- and para-chlortoluenes, but at the boiling point the See also: side chain is substituted (see BENZALDEHYDE)
.
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