Experiment 5.

This seems to be the best method and the one employed hereafter in the preparation of all the material subsequently used. The solid ortho toluidine sulphonic acid is suspended in concentrated hydrochloric acid and vigorously stirred. The solution becomes warm and the crystals change in appearance, probably due to the formation of the hydrochloride. The mass is then cooled to 5°, and sodium nitrite solution added slowly with stirring. Immediate reaction takes place, and the mass becomes very pasty as in the first experiment. After obtaining a reaction with starch iodide paper the mixture was allowed to stand a half hour, then filtered by suction, washed with ether and dried. In appearance it was identical with the diazo compound obtained in experiment 1, and can be kept in the same way.

That it was a diazo compound was shown as follows: It was spotted on a piece of filter paper with an alkaline solution of H acid—a red coloration indicates the formation of a red azo dyestuff.

Some of the diazo compound was boiled with dilute nitric acid as described by Nevile and Winther, and a yellowish precipitate of needles obtained, which on recrystallization from denatured alcohol gave light yellow needles of dinitro ortho cresol, (3-hydroxy 3,5-dinitro toluene), melting at 83.5-84° uncorr. (Nevile and Winther gave 85° for the pure substance.) This dinitro compound was obtained in nearly quantitative yield indicating that the diazo compound was presumably pure.