Triphenylmethane
Triphenylmethane or triphenyl methane, is the hydrocarbon with the formula 3CH. This colorless solid is soluble in nonpolar organic solvents and not in water. Triphenylmethane is the basic skeleton of many synthetic dyes called triarylmethane dyes, many of them are pH indicators, and some display fluorescence. A trityl group in organic chemistry is a triphenylmethyl group Ph3C, e.g. triphenylmethyl chloride and the triphenylmethyl radical.
Preparation
Triphenylmethane was first synthesized by heating diphenylmercury with benzal chloride.It can be synthesized by Friedel–Crafts reaction from benzene and chloroform in the presence of aluminium chloride catalyst:
Alternatively, benzene may react with carbon tetrachloride using the same catalyst to obtain the triphenylmethyl chloride–aluminium chloride adduct which is then treated with diethyl ether for 24 hours at room temperature and hydrolyzed with concentrated hydrochloric acid:
It can also be synthesized from benzylidene chloride, which is prepared from benzaldehyde and phosphorus pentachloride.
Reactions of C-H bond
The Ph3C-H bond is relatively weak, with a bond dissociation energy of 81 kcal/mol, or about 24 kcal/mol less than methane. Correspondingly, triphenylmethane is relatively acidic, with a pKa of 33.Triphenylmethane is significantly more acidic than most other hydrocarbons because the charge is delocalized over three phenyl rings. Steric effects however prevent all three phenyl rings from achieving coplanarity simultaneously. Consequently diphenylmethane is even more acidic, albeit only slightly, because in its anion the charge is spread over two phenyl rings at the same time.
The trityl anion is isolable in crown ethers:
Its sodium salt can be prepared from the chloride:
The use of tritylsodium as a strong, non-nucleophilic base has been eclipsed by the popularization of butyllithium and related strong bases.
The unmodified anion is red, and can be used as an indicator in acid–base titrations. Derived substances have proven useful as chemical dyes.
Triarylmethane dyes
Examples of triarylmethane dyes are bromocresol green:And the nitrogen-bearing malachite green: