The Industrial Phase-Transfer Catalysis Experts

PTC Tip of the Month E-Newsletter

PTC Reaction of the Month - June 2021

Two Catalytic QX Reactions Not PTC

By Marc Halpern, the leading expert in industrial phase-transfer catalysis.

Two patents were issued this month that use catalytic tetrabutylammonium salts that are not phase-transfer catalysis reactions.

In one case, tetrabutylammonium iodide was used as a Finkelstein catalyst to activate a primary alkyl chloride in-situ to the iodide. In this case, activation was likely needed due to the N-alkylation of an aniline which typically suffers from low nucleophilicity.

In another case, catalytic tetrabutylammonium salts were used to ring open an epoxide. The resulting haloalkoxide intermediate then attacked carbon dioxide which ring closed to form a cyclic carbonate, useful as a solvent.

The inventors of this patent screened a variety of tetrabutylammonium salts. Unsurprisingly, they found that the TBA salts containing nucleophilic halides such as iodide, bromide and chloride, worked the best, whereas salts containing non-nucleophilic anions, such as tetrabutylammonium hydrogen sulfate, were not effective due to their inability to ring open the epoxide required to initiate the reaction sequence starting from formation of the alkoxide. In addition, the ring closing to the cyclic carbonate requires a leaving group. It makes sense that chloride, bromide and iodide worked well for both the ring opening of the epoxide and the ring closing to the cyclic carbonate. In contrast, hydrogen sulfate, phosphate and fluoride did not work well or work at all. Acetate worked to some degree since it is somewhat nucleophilic and it can act as a leaving group.

Obviously, the halide is catalytic since it attacks the epoxide and later is a leaving group and the role of the tetrabutylammonium cation is to solubilize the halide in the reaction phase. In other words, QX was successfully used in catalytic quantities but the mechanism is not phase-transfer catalysis since the halide is always soluble in the reaction phase.

Another very interesting aspect of this reaction is that the process is continuous using Dow Corning’s Advanced Flow Reactor (TM).

When you do need highly specialized expertise in industrial phase-transfer catalysis to cost-effectively improve the performance of true PTC applications, click here to describe your needs and contact Marc Halpern of PTC Organics.


About Marc Halpern

Marc Halpern

Dr. Halpern is founder and president of PTC Organics, Inc., the only company dedicated exclusively to developing low-cost high-performance green chemistry processes for the manufacture of organic chemicals using Phase Transfer Catalysis. Dr. Halpern has innovated PTC breakthroughs for pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals, petrochemicals, monomers, polymers, flavors & fragrances, dyes & pigments and solvents. Dr. Halpern has provided PTC services on-site at more than 260 industrial process R&D departments in 37 countries and has helped chemical companies save > $200 million. Dr. Halpern co-authored five books including the best-selling “Phase-Transfer Catalysis: Fundamentals, Applications and Industrial Perspectives” and has presented the 2-day course “Practical Phase-Transfer Catalysis” at 50 locations in the US, Europe and Asia.

Dr. Halpern founded the journal “Industrial Phase-Transfer Catalysis” and “The PTC Tip of the Month” enjoyed by 2,100 qualified subscribers, now beyond 130 issues. In 2014, Dr. Halpern is celebrating his 30th year in the chemical industry, including serving as a process chemist at Dow Chemical, a supervisor of process chemistry at ICI, Director of R&D at Sybron Chemicals and founder and president of PTC Organics Inc. (15 years) and PTC Communications Inc. (20 years). Dr. Halpern also co-founded PTC Interface Inc. in 1989 and PTC Value Recovery Inc. in 1999. His academic breakthroughs include the PTC pKa Guidelines, the q-value for quat accessibility and he has achieved industrial PTC breakthroughs for a dozen strong base reactions as well as esterifications, transesterifications, epoxidations and chloromethylations plus contributed to more than 100 other industrial PTC process development projects.

Dr. Halpern has dedicated his adult life to his family and to phase-transfer catalysis (in that order!).

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