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The main steps in this process are the production of chlorobenzene from benzene, hydrochloric acid and oxygen, and the subsequent hydrolysis of chlorobenzene to phenol. [4] The first step uses either a copper or iron chloride catalyst and exposes the materials to air at 200–250 °C.
More so than thiophenol, benzeneselenol is easily oxidized by air. The facility of this reaction reflects the weakness of the Se-H bond, bond dissociation energy of which is estimated to be between 67 and 74 kcal/mol. [1] In contrast, the S-H BDE for thiophenol is near 80 kcal/mol. [3] The product is diphenyl diselenide as shown in this idealized equation:
Benzene can be easily converted to chlorobenzene by nucleophilic aromatic substitution via a benzyne intermediate. [1] It is treated with aqueous sodium hydroxide at 350 °C and 300 bar or molten sodium hydroxide at 350 °C to convert it to sodium phenoxide , which yields phenol upon acidification. [ 2 ]
The cumene process (cumene-phenol process, Hock process) is an industrial process for synthesizing phenol and acetone from benzene and propylene. The term stems from cumene (isopropyl benzene), the intermediate material during the process. It was invented by R. Ūdris and P. Sergeyev in 1942 (USSR), [1] and independently by Heinrich Hock in ...
They are typically produced by the alkylation of benzene/toluene with propylene to form cumene then O 2 is added with H 2 SO 4 to form phenol (Hock process). In addition to the reactions above, many other more specialized reactions produce phenols: rearrangement of esters in the Fries rearrangement [7] [8]
Dow process (phenol), a method of phenol production through the hydrolysis of chlorobenzene Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Dow process .
Phenol is an organic compound appreciably soluble in water, with about 84.2 g dissolving in 1000 ml (0.895 M). Homogeneous mixtures of phenol and water at phenol to water mass ratios of ~2.6 and higher are possible. The sodium salt of phenol, sodium phenoxide, is far more water-soluble. It is a combustible solid (NFPA rating = 2).
The half-sandwich complex in the Dötz reaction can be demetallated to give corresponding aryl product, or it could be further employed for a nucleophilic addition to aromatic system strategy for synthesis of fully-substituted benzene ring. [14] The Dötz reaction has been employed in the syntheses of natural products, as illustrated below. [15 ...