Is it possible to get benzene from sodium benzoate?

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The discussion centers on the challenges of obtaining benzene, which is not readily available for purchase. Sodium benzoate, a more accessible compound, can be produced by neutralizing benzoic acid with sodium hydroxide. However, the proposed method of dry distilling sodium benzoate with sodium hydroxide to yield benzene raises safety concerns due to the handling of molten sodium hydroxide at high temperatures. Participants express caution regarding the dangers of producing benzene, emphasizing its toxic and carcinogenic properties even in small amounts. The conversation highlights a search for safer alternatives, such as using electrolysis, but no specific methods are confirmed as viable. Overall, the thread reflects a strong emphasis on safety and the risks associated with attempting to synthesize benzene.
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I want a small amount of benzene. Obviously it is not easily purchasable, but sodium benzoate is. I have heard one way is to dry distil sodium benzoate and sodium hydroxide, but the though of dealing with molten sodium hydroxide at such high temperatures sounds too dangerous. Is there any other alternative that could perhaps be performed with standard glassware, e.g. some route using electrolysis.
 
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Fezziwig said:
I want a small amount of benzene. Obviously it is not easily purchasable,

. Not easily purchasable?
 
Sodium benzoate is produced by neutralizing benzoic acid with sodium hydroxide. I don't know how 'cooking' sodium benzoate with more sodium hydroxide is going to produce benzene. I would be generally wary of 'street chemistry' and the things I heard from random people. Benzene is toxic and carcinogenic in even 'small' quantities.
 
Thanks. Yes as far as I'm aware it is not very easy to get benzene unless you can list a source. And was not suggesting I try the above method. I was simply asking if anyone knows of an alternative to it, precisely because it is dangerous.
 
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