Kugelrohr

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Kugelrohr
1  Heating cage
2  Bulb containing item to be distilled
3  Cooling bath containing ice
4  Vacuum outlet and electric motor (to rotate ball-string)
UsesDistillation
Related itemsVacuum distillation

A Kugelrohr (German for "ball tube") is a short-path vacuum distillation apparatus[1] typically used to distill relatively small amounts of compounds with high boiling points (usually greater than 300 °C) under greatly reduced pressure.

Design

"Short path" refers to the short distance that the vapors of the distillate need to travel, which helps reduce loss and speed up collection of the distillate. Distilling under vacuum is used to prevent the compound from charring due to atmospheric oxygen, as well as to allow the distillation to proceed at a lower temperature.[2][3]

The apparatus consists of an electric heater with a digital thermostat and two or more bulbs connected with ground glass joints. The compound to be distilled is placed in the last bulb. The other bulbs can be used to collect the distillates sequentially; when they are collecting the desired fraction, the bulb is cooled with ice to aid condensation. A motor drive is used to rotate the string of bulbs to reduce bumping and give even heating for an efficient distillation.

See also

References

  1. ^ Laurence M. Harwood, Christopher J. Moody (13 Jun 1989). Experimental organic chemistry: Principles and Practice (Illustrated ed.). WileyBlackwell. p. 150. ISBN 978-0-632-02017-1. ISBN 0-632-02017-2.
  2. ^ Kugelrohr Distillation Apparatus at the Sigma-Aldrich company website, accessed 8 Sep 2006.
  3. ^ Kugelrohr Distillation Apparatus at the Buchi company website, accessed 15 Nov 2006.

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