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When I place a chunk of 99,99% pure sodium metal in a beaker of (100% chemically pure) acetone, the sodium metal starts reacting and dissolving into the acetone and it forms a yellow/brown liquid. When the acetone evaporates it leaves a dark-brown goo that is like a gel. And it smells like tar or something similar. What is this substance?

Mithoron
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Pär
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    related https://chemistry.stackexchange.com/questions/6527/how-does-sodium-in-ethanol-reduce-carbonyl-compounds – Mithoron Sep 13 '17 at 23:27
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    Brown goo is the ultimate product of *any* organic reaction. Some reactions happen to produce something useful besides it, some don't. – Ivan Neretin Sep 14 '17 at 05:11

1 Answers1

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I can suggest only two possibilities:

  1. Your acetone or sodium are not pure. Acetone contains water, or something.

  2. Sodium might react like magnesium does, though it required different conditions. That's possible, but maybe you just discovered a new reaction or had some weird impurities that served as a catalyst.

mechanism

Mithoron
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MEL Science
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