Cyanoacrylate Monomer Process
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Abstract:
A new step in the condensation of formaldehyde and esters of 2-cyanoacetic acid to produce 2-cyanoacrylate esters which consists essentially of catalyzing the reaction by means of a mixture of an acid and the salt of a primary or secondary amine with the same stronger acid. To be effective, the catalytic mixture should have a pH value of 5 or less when exact amounts of its components are dissolved in 25 ml. of water. If the catalytic mixture is to include an acid which is not readily soluble in water (e.g. organic acids), then the pH is measured in 25 ml. of an ethanol-water mixture and subsequently corrected as described in J. Am. Chem. Soc., 75, 576 (1953).
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United States Patent ffice
3,654,340
Patented Apr. 4, 1972
1
3,654,340
CYANOACRYLATE MONOMER PROCESS
Elden H. Banitt, Woodbury, Minn., assignor to Minnesota
Mining and Manufacturing Company, St. Paul, Minn.
No Drawing. Continuation-in-part of application Ser. No.
641,142, May 25, 1967, which is a continuation-in-part
of application Ser. No. 595,324, Nov. 18, 1966. This
application Aug. 27, 1970, Ser. No. 67,635
Int. Cl. C07c 121/48, 121/30, 121/52
U.S. Cl. 260—465.4 6 Claims
ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE
A new step in the condensation of formaldehyde and
esters of 2-cyanoacetic acid to produce 2-cyanoacrylate
esters which consists essentially of catalyzing the reaction
by means of a mixture of an acid and the salt of a primary
or secondary amine with the same or stronger acid. To be
effective, the catalytic mixture should have a pH value
of 5 or less when exact amounts of its components are
dissolved in 25 ml. of water. If the catalytic mixture is
to include an acid which is not readily soluble in Water
(e.g. organic acids), then the pH is measured in 25 ml.
of an ethanol-water mixture and subsequently corrected as
described in J. Am. Chem. Soc., 75, 576 (1953).
This application is a continuation-in-part of my earlier-
filed application Ser. No. 641,142 filed May 25, 1967
which was a continuation-in-part of my earlier application
Ser. No. 595,324, filed Nov. 18, 1966, now abandoned.
FIELD OF INVENTION
This invention relates to a process for the preparation.
of 2-cyanoacrylate monomers and is particularly con-
cerned with such preparation in improved yields. The
invention includes a new step in the condensation of 2-
cyanoacetic esters to produce 2-cyanoacrylate esters and
consists essentially of catalyzing the reaction by means
of a mixture of an acid and the acidic salt of an alkyl
primary or secondary amine with an acid of the same or
greater strength.
DESCRIPTION OF TH-E PRIOR ART
Monomeric 2-cyanoacrylates previously have been pre-
pared by means of base-catalyzed condensation of esters
of cyanoacetic acids and formaldehyde, during which
condensation water is azeotropically removed and low
molecular weight polymeric cyanoacrylate esters are iso-
lated and thermally depolymerized to give the monomer.
This process was originally described in Ardis, US. Pat.
No. 2,467,927, and substantially improved upon by
processes disclosed in Joyner and Hawkins, U.S-. Pat. No.
2,721,858; Joyner and Shearer, U.S. Pat. No. 2,756,251
and Jeremias, ‘US. Pat. No. 2,763,677. Since, however,
the polymerization of 2-cyanoacrylate monomer as dis-
closed in the above references requires initiation by weak
bases, trace amounts of base which remain from the
condensation step may be carried over into the product
and cause unpredictable re-polymerization of monomer.
Thus, it has been observed that yields of monomeric 2-
cyano-acrylate prepared using these processes have evi-
denced a marked lack of uniformity, some batches existing
as monomer (having useful shelf life) for shorter or
longer periods of time than others.
It is the object of this invention, therefore, to im-
prove upon these processes so as to provide a reliable
and reproducible method for preparing monomeric 2-
cyanoacrylates in pure form and in certain cases, to
increase the overall yield of monomer.
This object is attained by employing a novel and signifi-
cant step in the process for preparing 2-cyanoacrylate
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monomers which has not heretofore been utilized in the
art. This step embodies the use of an acidic catalytic mix-
ture consisting of an acid and a primary or secondary
aromatic or heterocyclic amine salt with the same or
stronger acid, both of which components must be present
throughout the condensation reaction as is evident from
the examples hereinafter. Without the presence of said
amine acid salt throughout the course of the reaction,
esters of cyanoacetic acids normally will not undergo
acid—catalyzed condensation with formaldehyde.
So far as is known, acid catalysis has not heretofore
been utilized in preparing polymers of 2-cyanoacrylates.
See, e.g. U.S. -Pats. 2,467,927; 2,721,858, 2,756,251 and
2,763,677, in each of which basic catalysis is referred to
for forming the polymer and no disclosure is made of
acid catalysis for that purpose.
Thus, the present invention provides a process which,
by employing an acidic catalytic mixture for both initial
polymer formation and subsequent depolymerization,
differs substantially in concept from prior art methods.
It has been found that the preparation of 2-cyanoacrylate
monomers by the process of this invention results in yields
of substantially increased purity, stability and uniformity,
and specifically in the case of fluoroalkyl monomers, im-
proved yields. The ditficulty with spontaneous, premature
polymerization of monomer after acid depolymerization
encountered with the process of the prior art is sub-
stantially reduced using this process.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The process of this invention is especially useful in the
preparation of monomeric fluoroalkyl 2-cyanoacrylates.
Yields of monomeric fluoroalkyl 2-cyanoacrylates pre-
pared from the corresponding acetates are in the range of
40 to 50 percent, which generally is up to double the
yield available by means of base catalyzed processes of
the prior art type. The purity of the fluoroalkyl monomers
obtained in the depolymerization step is shown by vapor
phase chromatography to be usually 95 percent or greater.
This invention may be practiced by employing esters
of 2-cyanoacetic acid of the formula
CN~—CHz-COZR
wherein R is a member of the group of allyl, cyclohexyl,
phenyl, benzyl, or CHRIRZ containing 1 to 8 carbon atoms
wherein R1 or R2 is independently H, alkyl or perfluorakyl
or monohydroperfluoroalkyl of 1 to 7 carbon atoms,
chloro-or alkyl of 1 to 4 carbon atoms and 1 to 3 chlorine
or fluorine atoms, unsubstituted or halogenated oxa- or
thia-alkylene of 3 to 7 carbon atoms containing not more
than two chlorine or three fluorine atoms. Included in
such compounds are methyl, ethyl, n-octyl, isopropyl, iso-
butyl, n-butyl, neopentyl, methoxyethyl, ethoxyethyl, iso-
propoxyethyl, n-butoxyethyl, phenyl, benzyl, cychlohexyl,
3,3,3 - trifluoroisobutyl, 1,1 - dichloroisopropyl, 1,l,1-tri-
fluoroisopropyl, 2-(2,2,2-trifluoroethoxy)ethyl or 1-(2,2,2-
trifluoroethoxy)isopropyl, 2-allyloxyethyl, 2,2,2—trifluoro-
thioethyl, ethylthioethyl, 1,1,7-trihydroperfluoro heptyl,
1,1—dihydroperfluoropentyl, 3-(trifluoromethyl)butyl, n-
hexylthioethyl, methylthioethyl, 2-chloroethyl omega-hy-
droperfluoro-n-amyl cyanoacetates each of which is found
to react with formaldehyde in the process of the invention
to provide the corresponding cyanoacrylate.
With particular reference to the preparation of fluoro-
alkyl 2-cyanoacrylate esters, it is preferred to employ
2(2,2,2-trifluoroethoxy) ethyl 2-cyanoacetate, 2,2,2-tri-
fluoroethyl 2-cyanoacetate, 1,1-dihydroper-fluoropropyl 2-
cyanoacetate or 2,2,3,3-tetrafluoropropyl 2-cyanoacetate.
The ester is reacted with anhydrous formaldehyde or
polymers thereof such as paraformaldehyde. Aqueous
solutions of formaldehyde as typified by formalin are un-
satisfactory. The reaction medium may be any suitable
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inert organic solvent capable of forming an azeotrope
with water or codistilling with water such as benzene,
toluene, xylene, etc. The reaction is carried out under ap-
proximately atmospheric pressure at the boiling point or
codistillation temperature of the azeotrope or solvent, i.e.,
about 60°-160° C., and preferably 70° to 145° C. Other
similar solvents capable of removing water may be used
under other pressures at the same temperature range.
The essential and novel feature of this invention is the
particular combination of catalytic materials employed.
Because esters of cyanoacetic acids normally will not
undergo simple acid- catalyzed condensation with form-
aldehyde, the amine acid salt plays an integral role; with-
out it the reaction fails. Any acid salt of an aliphatic or
cycloaliphatic primary or secondary or aromatic or
heterocyclic amine and any free acid may be utilized as
components of the catalytic mixture, provided they estab-
lish the necessary pH value is described in detail below.
The salt forming acid may be of the same strength as the
free acid or stronger. Thus one or two acids may be used
or more. Two different salts may be present simultane-
ously.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED
EMBODIMENTS
The improved results obtained in accordance with this
invention depend essentially upon carrying out all phases
of the synthetic sequence under acidic conditions. A
criterion for utility of the catalytic mixture selected is
that it have a corrected pH value of not over pH 5. This
pH value can be determined as follows:
The exact amounts of amine acid salt and free acid to
be used in the condensation step are dissolved in 25 ml.
of water, and the pH of the solution is measured. If the
resulting pH value is 5 or less, the mixture will adequately
catalyze the condensation reaction. When the mixture is
soluble in water, this is the “corrected pH value.”
Catalytic mixtures comprising organic acids which are
not readily soluble in water may be dissolved in 25 ml.
of an ethanol-water mixture; however, the measured pH
must then be corrected as described by B. Gutbezahl and
E. Grunwald in J. Am. Chem. Soc., 75, 565 (1953).
A convenient method for determining such mixtures is
to dissolve 1 gram of amine salt in 50 ml. of water (or
water-ethanol mixture) together with the proportional
amount of the acid to be used. If the pH of the solution
(corrected for water-ethanol mixtures as described in the
reference) is 5 or less, this combination and proportion
is suitable. If the pH is not sufiiciently low more acid is
added until the suitable proportion is determined. The
solution tested for pH is seen to be about 2-5% by weight
of the catalyst combination.
Particularly preferred catalyst combinations include:
piperidine hydrochloride and glacial acetic acid;
piperidine hydrochloride and hydrochloric acid;
bis-(2-chloroethyl) amine hydrochloride and acetic acid;
morpholine hydrochloride and acetic acid.
Proportions are such that from about 4 to 25% of the
mixture is acid and preferably about 4—l0%.
Other combinations of acid catalysts are made up from
acids of suitable strength, i.e., a dissociation constant of
1x10"5 or more (smaller exponent), and a primary or
secondary aliphatic or cycloaliphatic or secondary aro-
matic or heterocyclic amine having a pKa of at least 4
and preferably 10 or more. Preferred amines are second-
ary amines of the group of alkyl and heterocyclic with
pKa of above 10. Tables of constants for bases and acids
are available, e.g., Handbook of Chemicals and Physics.
Exemplary suitable acids include sulfuric, perchloric,
phosphoric, hydrochloric, acetic, mono-, di- or tri-chloro-
or -fluoro-acetic, bromoacetic, propionic, ot- or ;3-bromo-
propionic, butyric, phthalic, trifluoromethanesulfonic and
toluenesulfonic acids to name a few. It is preferred that
the acids are not strongly oxidizing and they should not
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be substituted with hydroxyl, amino or other groups than
the acid group which provide Zerewitinoif-type hydrogen.
It is, of course, convenient and fully satisfactory to use
readily available acids although many others are also
effective and are equivalents. As noted above, the acid
combined with the amine must be of the same or greater
strength than the free acid. Interchange of acids will take
place spontaneously if a stronger acid such as hydro-
chloric is used with an amine salt such as the acetate. The
extent of the interchange will depend on the relative
amounts available. Especially useful amines include pyr-
rolidine, diethylamine, di-n-butylamine, N-methylpiper-
azine, morpholine, piperidine, bis (betachloroethyl) amine,
of the group having pKa values of 4 and higher and
mostly above 10.
It is essential that both primary or secondary amine
salt and free acid are always present. Glacial acetic acid
or strong mineral acids such as hydrochloric acid or
sulfuric acid are preferred. The amount of catalyst em-
ployed is not critical and may be varied. Ordinarily small
amounts, e.g. 0.5 to 1 percent by weight based on the
weight of cyanoacetic ester is adequate.
The process step which is the subject of this invention
is the condensation of cyanoacetic esters with formalde-
hyde using the amine acid salt and free acid as catalysts.
The subsequent deploymerization step is carried out by
methods similar to prior art methods.
The monomeric 2-cycloacrylates prepared in accord-
ance with this invention are excellent adhesive composi-
tions for bonding almost-any type of material to itself or
to a dissimilar material. The adhesive monomers are
readily employed by merely spreading them in a thin film
on the surface to be bonded. Polymerization occurs rapid-
ly without the use of either heat or a polymerization cat-
alyst; the resulting bonds are of very high strength.
This invention is illustrated by the following examples
of certain preferred embodiments thereof. It will be
understood, however, that the examples are included
merely for the purpose of illustration and are not intended
to limit the scope of the invention, unless otherwise
specifically indicated. All parts are by weight unless other-
wise specified, and the pressures are shown in millimeters
of mercury.
Example 1: Fluoroalkyl cyanoacetates
Fluoroalkyl cyanoacetates required as starting materials
in the synthesis of fluoroalkyl 2-cyanoacrylates described
in this invention are not available by simple esterification
of cyanoacetic acid. A general procedure for the special
preparation of these materials from cyanoacetyl chloride
on a large scale is given below. "
A 5-1 three-necked, round-bottomed flask equipped
with an efficient mechanical stirrer, large addition funnel
and reflux condenser topped with a gas exit tube was
charged with 1000 ml. of diethyl ether and 1042.5 g. of
phosphorus pentachloride. This suspension was stirred and
cooled in an ice bath. In separate container, a solution of
425.5 g. (5.0 moles) of cyanoacetic acid in 1750 ml.‘of
diethyl ether was dried over magnesium sulfate and filtered
to remove drying agent. It was then added over a period
of 3-7 minutes with good stirring to the cold suspension.
(The exothermic reaction which occurs can be controlled
by adjusting the rate of addition, but a rapid rate is
essential for optimum yield.) The condenser was immedi-
ately replaced with a short head and condenser. Ether
and phosphorus (aspirator) to afford crude cyanoacetyl
chloride as an orange-red, mobile liquid. During this
operation, the internal pot temperature was not allowed
to exceed 55° C. This step is critical since higher tempera-
tures will cause degradation of cyanoacetyl chloride and
may induce exothermic and uncontrollable polymeriza-
tion. Samples of cyanoacetyl chloride should be used
directly after preparation and should not be stored.
Distillation apparatus was then removed and replaced
with a reflux condenser topped with a gas exit tube. The
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selected fluoroalcohol was placed in the funnel and about
one-third added to the crude cyanoacetyl chloride. If the
reaction did not begin spontaneously as evidenced by evo-
lution of hydrogen chloride, the mixture was heated to
55 °—65° C.; the remaining fluoroalcohol was then added
slowly to maintain a smooth reaction. After completion of
addition, the mixture was stirred at 55°—65° C. until no
more hydrogen chloride was evolved. The acidic product
was transferred to a smaller flask and crudely distilled to
afford fluoroalkyl cyanoacetate, Fractional redistillation
provided pure fluoroalkyl cyanoacetate with yields in the
range of 75-85 percent.
Example 2: 2,2,2-trifluoroethyl 2-cyanoacrylate
Six hundred milliliters of benzene, 167.1 g. (1.0 mole)
of 2,2,2-trifluoroethyl cyanoacetate, 36.0 g. (1.2 moles) of
powdered paraformaldehyde, 1.0 g. of piperidine hydro-
chloride and 0.2 ml. of glacial acetic acid were combined
in a 1-1 two-necked round-bottomed flask equipped with
mechanical stirrer, Dean-Stark water trap and reflux con-
denser. The heterogeneous mixture was stirred and heated
and heated under gentle reflux until all water formed dur-
ing the reaction had been azeotropically removed and
collected in the Dean-Stark trap. Only a portion of the
poly (trifluoroethyl cyanoacrylate) formed in the reac-
tion separated; the remainder was precipitated by cooling
the flask in an ice bath.
After the cold benzene had been decanted, 300 ml. of
anhydrous acetone was added and warmed to dissolve
polymer. The clear polymer solution was filtered (to
remove piperidine hydrochloride and any unreacted para-
formaldehyde) into a clean 1-1 two-necked, round-
bottomed flask equipped with mechanical stirrer, and 100
g. of tricresyl phosphate were added to aid in fluidizing
the mixture. Acetone was then removed by distillation.
Pressure in the system was gradually reduced to 15-20
mm. Hg, and the bath temperature slowly raised to 110°-
120° C. Last traces of acetone were eliminated by stirring
the yellow, viscous mixture vigorously for 30 minutes
under these conditions.
At this point, 6-10 g. of polyphosphoric acid and 0.5 g.
of pyrogallol were added to serve as inhibitors, and the
flask was equipped with a short take-off heat fitted with
a gas inlet tube mounted in the thermometer well. Thermal
depolymerization was effected by heating this mixture
under reduced pressure with good stirring while sulfur
dioxide was bled into the system. Collection of mono-
meric 2,2,2-trifluoroethyl 2-cyanoacrylate in a Dry Ice-
cooled receiver was begun when the bath temperature/
system pressure reached 155° C. /20 mm. and continued
up to a maximum of 200° C./ 10 mm. Clear, colorless
monomer obtained in this fashion is sufliciently pure for
most adhesive applications; yield, 95 g. (53 percent based
on 2,2,2-trifluoroethyl cyanoacetate).
Greater purity may be achieved by redistillation from
a small amount of phosphorus pentoxide using a short
Vigreux column. A sulfur dioxide bleed to serve as inhibi-
tor and prevent anionic polymerization is essential during
any such redistillation. On redistillation, the distillation
cut boiling at 83 °—84° C./ 13 mm. weighed 71 g. and was
shown to be 95.8 percent pure 2,2,2-trifluoroethyl 2-cyano-
acrylate.
Monomer purity was established by gas chromatog-
raphy using a chromatograph equipped wit-h a 6’ x M1"
nitrile-containing silicone column packed on diatomaceous
earth (of the type commercially available under the trade
name “60/70 Anakrom ABS”) and operated at column
temperatures of 150°—190° C. Monomer samples were
injected as 10 percent solutions in spectrograde nitro-
methane.
Example 3: 2-(2,2,2-trifluoroethoxy)ethyl 2-
cyanoacrylate
Two hundred milliliters of benzene, 84.0 g. (0.40 mole)
2-(2,2,2-trifluoroethoxy)ethyl cyanoacetate, 15.6 g. (0.52
Q7:
l0
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mole) powdered paraformaldehyde, 0.4 g. piperidine hy-
drochloride and 0.2 ml. glacial acetic acid were combined
in a 500 ml. two-necked, round-bottomed flask equipped
with mechanical stirrer. Dean-Stark water trap and reflux
condenser. The heterogeneous mixture was stirred and
heated under reflux until no additional water separated
in the Dean-Stark trap. The benzene solution was cooled,
filtered into a 250 ml. two-necked flask and concentrated
on a rotary evaporator.
The flask was equipped for depolymerization as out-
lined in Example 2, and 45 g. tricresyl phosphate was
added followed by 2 g. polyphosphoric acid and ‘0.2 g.
pyrogallol. The mixture was stirred and heated under
reduced pressure in the presence of sulfur dioxide. Col-
lection of monomeric 2-(2,2,2-trifluoroethoxy)ethyl 2-
cyanoacrylate in a Dry Ice-cooled receiver was begun
when the bath temperature/ system pressure reached 190°
C./0.2 mm. and continued up to a maximum of 198° C./
0.2 mm.; yield, 69.8 g. (78.6%). Redistillation gave a 49
g. sample of monomer, B.P. 98°-—lO0° C./0.2 mm., which
was found to be 99.3 percent pure by gas-liquid chroma-
tography.
Example 4: 2-tritfluoromethyl-2-propyl 2-cyanoacrylate
Two hundred milliliters of ‘benzene, 48.18 g. (0.25 mole)
of 2-trifluoromethyl-2-propyl 2-cyanoacetate, 9.0 g. (0.30
mole) of powdered paraformaldehyde, 0.5 g. of piperidine
hydrochloride and 0.2 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric
acid (12 N) were combined in a 500 ml. two-necked round-
bottomed flask equipped with a mechanical stirrer, Dean-
Stark water separator and reflux condenser. The hetero-
geneous mixture was stirred and heated until no addi-
tional water separated in the trap. In this case, since the
low-molecular weight polymer formed in the reaction
remained in solution upon cooling, the benzene solution
was filtered into a 250 ml. two-necked flask and concen-
trated on a rotary evaporator. The flask was equipped for
depolymerization as outlined in Example 2, and 25 g. of
tricresyl phosphate, 5 g. of polyphosphoric acid and 0.5
g. of pyrogallol were added.
The mixture was stirred and heated under reduced
pressure in the presence of ‘sulfur dioxide. Collection of
monomeric 2-trlfluoromethyl-2-propyl 2-cyanoacrylate in
a Dry Ice-cooled receiver was begun when the bath tem-
perature/system pressure reached 165° C./ 19 mm. and
continued up to a maximum of 190° C./20 mm.; yield,
21.9 g. (42.3%). Using the gas chromatographic proce-
dure outlined in Example 2, this material was shown to
be 97.3 percent pure monomer and required no further
purification.
Example 5: n-octyl 2-cyanoacrylate
Two hundred fifty milliliters of benzene, 98.7 g. (0.5
mole) of n-octyl cyanoacetate, 19.5 g. (0.65 mole) of
powdered paraformaldehyde, 5.0 g. of piperidine hydro-
chloride and 0.2 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid
(12 N) were combined in a 500 ml. two-necked, round-
bottomed flask equipped as described above. The hetero-
geneous mixture was stirred and heated until no addi-
tional water separated in the Dean-Stark trap. Benzene
was removed with a rotary evaporator. The residue was
taken up in a mixture of 200 ml. of acetone and 100 ml.
of hexane and filtered into a 500 ml. two-necked flask.
Removal of acetone and hexane provided a Viscous resi-
due which was sufficiently fluid to permit easy handling.
Polyphosphoric acid (6 g.) and pyrogallol (1.0 g.)
were added to serve as inhibitors, and the flask was
equipped for depolymerization as described in Example 2.
The mixture was stirred and heated under reduced pres-
sure in the presence of sulfur dioxide. Collection of mono-
meric n-octyl 2-cyanoacrylate in a Dry Ice-cooled receiver
was begun when the bath temperature/system pressure
reached 1-65 ° C./ 0.6 mm. and continued up to a maximum
of 206° C./0.6 mm.; yield 57.4 g. (55%). Redistillation
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afforded a 42 g. sample of n-octyl 2-cyanoacrylate, B.P.
105 °—106° C./0.6-0.7 mm., which was found to be 93.2
percent pure ‘by gas-liquid chromatography.
Example 6: 2-chloroethyl 2-cyanoacrylate
Five hundred milliliters of benzene, 147.6 g. (1.0 mole)
of 2-chloroethyl cyanoacetate, 39 g. (1.3 moles) of pow-
dered paraformaldehyde, 1.0 g. of piperidine hydrochlo-
ride and 0.2 ml. of glacial acetic acid were combined in a
1-1, two-necked, round-bottomed flask equipped as de-
scribed above. The heterogeneous mixture was stirred
and heated until no additional water separated in the
Dean-Stark trap. Benzene was removed with a rotary
evaporator. The residue was taken up in 300' ml. of warm,
anhydrous acetone and filtered into a 1-1 two-necked
flesk. After 75 g. of tricresyl phosphate had been added,
acetone was removed as dscribed in Example 2.
At this pont 5 g. of polyphosphoric acid and 0.5 g. of
pyrogallol were addedd to serve as inhibitors, and the
flask was equipped for depolymerization. The mixture was
stirred and heated under reduced pressure in the presence
of sulfur dioxide. Collection of monomeric 2-chloroethyl
2-cyanoacrylate was begun when the bath temperature/
system pressure reached 150° C./ 0.15 mm. and continued
up to 170° C./0.15 mm. Crude, colorless monomer ob-
tained in this fashion weighed 99.1 g. (67%) and requird
no further purification before use; it was found to be 97.9
percent pure by gas-liquid chromatography.
Examples of other 2-cyanoacrylate esters which have
been prepared by use of the present invention are col-
lected in the following table, wherein relative amounts
and reaction procedures are substantially similar to those
described in Example 2.
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piperidine hydrochloride and hydrochloric acid as catalyst,
excellent conversions to the polymeric 2-cyanoacrylate are
realized and the polymers are then cleaved to monomer
under acidic conditions. Other acid catalyst mixtures are
also satisfactory as herein described.
What is claimed is: *
1. In a process for the preparation of esters of mono-
meric 2-cyanoacrylic acid the step of condensing form-
aldehyde under conditions for removal of water with an
ester of cyanoacetic acid of the formula NC—CHz—CO2R
wherein R is a member of the group of allyl, cyclohexyl,
phenyl, benzyl, or —CHR1R2 containing ‘1 to 8 ‘carbon
atoms, and R1 and R2 are independently H, alkyl, perfluoro-
alkyl or monohydroperfluoroalkyl of 2 to 7 carbon atoms,
chloro- or fluoroalkyl of 1 to 4 carbon atoms and lto 3
chlorine or fluorine atoms or unsubstituted or chlorinated
or fluorinated oxa- or thiaalkylene of 3 to 7 carbon atoms
containing not more than two chlorine or three fluorine
atoms, said condensation being carried out to substantial-
ly complete removal of water in an inert solvent codistill-
ing with water at atmospheric pressures at a temperature
from about 60° to 160° C. continuously having present as
acid catalyst the combination-of (I) first acid having a
dissociation constant of at least 1>
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