🧪 DMF: A powerful solvent & yet a persistent nuisance.
In synthetic organic chemistry, DMF (dimethylformamide) is indispensable, ideal for nucleophilic substitutions, formylations, peptide couplings, and more. But its high boiling point (153 °C) and polarity make it notoriously difficult to remove, especially in scale-up or when aqueous workups are undesirable.
💡 Beyond the usual rotavap under high bath tub temperature, here are a few less conventional but highly effective strategies I have found useful:
🔹 Azeotropic removal – Co-evaporate with toluene, heptane, or water under reduced pressure to shift the equilibrium and remove DMF more efficiently.
🔹 Silica/Celite adsorption – Leverage weak DMF-silica interactions; it tends to elute slowly or remain at the top of the column while your less polar product moves freely.
🔹 Crystallization – If your product is a solid, crystallizing from non-polar solvents like hexanes, diethyl ether, or EtOAc can leave DMF behind in the mother liquor.
These methods have saved me more than once, especially when purity is non-negotiable or downstream steps are DMF-sensitive.
🔬 Would love to hear: What’s your preferred strategy for DMF removal in challenging systems?
#ProcessChemistry #SyntheticChemistry #LabTips #SolventRemoval #DMF #OrganicSynthesis #ScaleUpChallenges
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