UV light costs a bit, and a path to
cyclobutane without light is known from
"Science of Synthesis: Houben-Weyl Methods of Molecular Transformations" ch. 48.3.1.2
(from 1,4-dichlorobutane and gaseous K+Na at 220°C and 0.1 torr with 70% yield), so it's interesting again to
"oligomerize" cyclobutane.
The C-H dissociation takes 404kJ/mol for cyclobutane as for tertiary unstrained alkane, according to
Neumann, "Organic Chemistry", chap 11.4
which is said to ease free-radical halogenations. Though, I haven't found direct reports of cyclobutane halogenation. Comments welcome!
Free-radical halogenations may exceed the intended degree, but
- I want anyway a mix of bis- and tris-cyclobutyl (appended sketch) to raise the flash point from +20°C to +55°C
- Plentiful isomers are welcome to lower the melting point
- If some isomers freeze too easily, they can be filtered out at cold
- I plan to separate the products as the reactor synthesizes them.
Since unselective halogenation is fine, maybe Cl
2, HBrO, Br
2+Cl
2 or even H
2O
2 can accelerate this step and save UV light further. Could the reaction rate be controlled by slowing the halogen inflow?
The oligomers shall result from Wurtz coupling (or a better idea).
- The competing cyclobutene production is energetically more defavoured than with straight alkanes.
- More than three rings aren't supposedly desired as they freeze more easily. They can be distilled or freezed away.
- Bis- and tris- simultaneously maximizes the proportion of monohalocyclobutane in the reactor hence reduces the too heavy products.
- What if the mono and dihalo bear different halogens? I imagine more reactive dibromocyclobutane kept in excess chlorocyclobutane by controlling the inflow in the continuous process. Opinions?
- Maybe the metal can be gaseous if advantageous.
How easy would it be to couple a halocyclobutane with plain cyclobutane? For one lorry a week of course. Avoiding the metal would be nice, and hopefully the degree of oligomerization is easier to control.
Details should come about the reactor that separates the mono-, di-... halocyclobutanes.
Marc Schaefer, aka Enthalpy