lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
US005504252A
United States Patent [19]
[11]
Patent Number:
Klemarczyk
[45]
Date of Patent:
5,504,252
Apr. 2, 1996
[54] SYNTHESIS OF CYANOACRYLATE ESTERS
BY OXIDATION OF AROMATIC SELENYL
CYANOPROPIONATES
hold pub.
Payne, et al., I. Org. Chem, 26, 1961, pp. 651—659.
Linn, et a1., “Organic Synthesis,” Coll. vol. 5, 1973, pp.
[75] Inventor: Philip Klemarczyk, Collinsville, Conn.
Hudlicky, “Oxidations in Organic Chemistry,” ACS Mona
graph 186, 1990, pp. 230-231.
Oakwood, et 21., “Organic Synthesis”, Coll. vol. 3, 1955, pp.
1007—1011.
[73] Assignee: Loctite Corporation, Hartford, Conn.
114—115.
[21] Appl. No.: 435,983
[22] Filed:
May 5, 1995
Corson, et 21., “Organic Synthesis”, Coll. vol. 1, 1932, pp.
[51]
Attorney, Agent, or Firm—Vidas, Arrett, & Steinkraus
336-340.
Int. Cl.6 ................................................. .. C07C 253/30
[52]
558/379; 558/443
[58]
Field of Search .................................... .. 558/379, 443
[56]
U.S. PATENT DOCUMENTS
2,467,926
12/1945 Long ..................................... .. 260/464
4/1949
Ardis
.. . .. ... ..
. . . ..
2,721,858 10/1955 Joyner et al.
3,254,111
5/1966
3,355,482
11/1967
Hawkins et a1.
... .....
Coover, Jr. et a1.
3,654,340
4/1972
....
8/1969 Ray et al. ......... ..
Banitt .... ..
4,012,402
3/1977 Buck ......... ..
4,153,641
5/1979 Deichert et a1.
5,140,084
8/1992 Mikuni et al. .... ..
5,140,840
8/1992
5,359,101
Miceli
260/465.4
260/465.4
3,463,804
[57]
ABSTRACT
A method of preparing an ot-cyanoacrylate ester of a desired
alcohol includes the steps of
References Cited
2,391,251
Primary Examiner-Joseph Paul Brust
... .. .... ... .
. . . ..
260/465.4
. . . . . . ..
260/464
260/465
. 260/465.4
526/298 X
260/827
526/279
. . . . . . ..
63/12
10/1994 Woods et al. ........................... .. 556/52
OTHER PUBLICATIONS
Skeist, “Handbook of Adhesines”, 3rd Ed,. 1990, pp.
466467, Reinhold pub.
Schumb, et al., “Hydrogen Peroxide”, 1955, p. 410; Rein
preparing a compound which is an ot-selenoaryl-ot-cyano
propionate ester of the desired alcohol,
oxidizing said oeselenoaryl-ot-cyanopropionate ester to
the corresponding selenoxide,
eliminating arylselenic acid from the selenoxide to pro
duce said ot-cyanoacrylate ester, and
separating said ot-cyanoacrylate' ester from the selenic
acid.
At temperatures of about 0° C. or higher, the elimination
step occurs concurrently with the oxidizing step using a
peroxide or ozone oxidizing agent. The desired cyanoacry
late ester is obtained in good yield and very high purity. The
method can be used to prepare di?icult to synthesize plural
functional cyanoacrylate monomers and mono- cyanoacry
late monomers regardless of alcohol chain length.
24 Claims, No Drawings
5,504,252
1
2
SYNTHESIS OF CYANOACRYLATE ESTERS
BY OXIDATION OF AROMATIC SELENYL
having plural cyanoacrylate functionality in reasonable yield
CYANOPROPIONATES
In Reich, et al, JACS, 97, 5434-47 (1975) and Bucheister,
et al, Organometallics, 1, 1679-84 (1982), it is reported that
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
certain otB-unsaturated methyl or ethyl esters were prepared
by oxidation/elimination reactions performed on corre
and with less di?‘iculty than that of U.S. Pat. No. 4,012,402.
The most common method for the production of
sponding methyl or ethyl ot-selenoarylpropionate esters.
However it has not been previously proposed or suggested
cyanoacrylate monomers involves the base catalyzed Kno
evenagel condensation of cyanoacetate with formaldehyde,
followed by acid catalyzed therrnolysis of the intermediate
to try to use such procedure to prepare ot-cyanoacrylate
esters, nor has it been proposed or suggested to try to prepare
polymer. This method is exempli?ed in many references, for
esters of C8 or higher alcohols or plural ester compounds by
instance U.S. Pat. Nos, 2,721,858; 3,254,111; 3,355,482;
3,654,340; 5,140,084 and 5,359,101. This method is e?ec
tive and inexpensive in producing low molecular weight
monomers, but as the size of the cyanoacrylate ester
increases the method becomes more di?icult and yields
preparation and oxidation/elimination of ot-selenoaryl-ot
cyanopropionate esters.
15
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
diminish substantially. Cyanoacrylate esters of monofunc
tional C8 or higher aliphatic alcohols cannot be produced in
The present invention is directed to a novel method for
preparing cyanoacrylate monomers which can be used to
commercially practical yields by this method.
There are several other synthetic methods known for 20 prepare di?icult to synthesize higher molecular weight
producing cyanoacrylates including:
cyanoacrylate monomers and plural functional cyanoacry
Diels-Alder protection/deprotection as exempli?ed by
U.S. Pat. No. 3,463,804 and 4,012,402;
late monomers as well as more conventional monofunctional
cyanoacrylate monomers in high yield and by a relatively
simple procedure.
transesteri?cation of cyanoacrylate monomers with alco
hols as reported in WPI 80-82239C/46, abstracting (SU
726086 (1980));
25
direct esteri?cation of cyanoacrylic acid with alcohols as
reported in DE 34 15 181 (1984);
thermal decomposition of alkyl 2-cyano-3-alkoxypropi
onates and the 3-acyloxy analogs, reported in U.S. Pat.
No. 2,467,926; and
pyrolysis of the cyanohydrin acetates of pyruvic acid
esters, reported in U.S. Pat. No. 2,391,251.
Monomers having a plurality of cyanoacrylate groups per
molecule are particularly desirable because they can give
35
crosslinked products on polymerization, alone or in combi
nation with conventional monofunctional cyanoacrylate
monomers. Crosslinked polymers give improved properties
such as solvent resistance. The Diels-Alder protection!
40
The invention in one aspect is a method of preparing an
tat-cyanoacrylate ester of a desired alcohol, the method
comprising the steps of
preparing a compound which is an oz-selenoaryl-ot-cyano
propionate ester of said alcohol,
oxidizing said ot-selenoaryl-ot-cyanopropionate ester to
the corresponding selenoxide,
eliminating arylselenic acid from said selenoxide to pro
duce said ot-cyanoacrylate ester, and
separating said ot-cyanoacrylate ester from said arylse
lenic acid.
At temperatures of about 0° C. or higher, the elimination
step occurs concurrently with the oxidizing step using a
peroxide or ozone oxidizing agent. The desired cyanoacry
late ester is obtained in good yield and very high purity.
deprotection disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,012,402 has been
used to prepare various bis-cyanoacrylate monomers. How
ever, the method is cumbersome and not suited to commer
cial production.
Kadykov, et. al., “Synthesis and Properties of Siloxane
DETAHJED DESCRIPTION OF THE
PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
45
Cyanoacrylate Adhesives, ” Plast. massy, 1984, No. 10,
hydroxypropyldimethylsiloxane" by reaction of one mole
diepoxydimethylsiloxane and two moles ot~cyanoacrylic
acid in the presence of 0.03 moles tertiary amine catalyst and
0.05 mole hydroquinone monomethyl ether. The reaction is
reported to be exothermic and to produce the bis-ester of the
formula:
In the inventive method as described above, the ot-sele
noaryl-cx-cyanopropionate ester is suitably prepared by
pp.8—9, reports an alleged syntheses of “diacryl-ot-cyano-B
treating a corresponding (ll-cyanopropionate ester with a
base of su?icient strength to abstract an ot-H atom from the
50
cyanopropionate ester and adding an arylselenylhalide of the
formula
where Ar is an aryl group and X is Cl , Br or I.
CN
on
?H3
on
CN
55
481/ O\)\/O_?l~ \/l\/o%
0
CH3
0
However, the reaction conditions employed make it
unlikely that such a product could actually be isolated and
the analytical data reported in this reference on the product
60
The ot-cyanopropionate ester of the desired alcohol can be
prepared by known means. In general any means suitable for
preparing ot-cyanoacetate esters can be readily modi?ed by
known methods to prepare corresponding ot-cyanopropro
pionate esters. Such methods include acid catalyzed direct
esteri?cation of cyanopropionic acid with an alcohol,
optionally in the presence of 2-halopyridinium salts; base
catalyzed alkylation reactions of cyanopropionic acid with
which was isolated is believed to con?rm that the product
alkyl halides; acid or base catalyzed transesteri?cation reac
was not the bis-cyanoacrylate.
tions; nucleophilic substitution reactions where chloropro
There therefore exists a need for further alternative meth 65 pionates are treated with alkali cyanides in a direct cyanation
ods for cyanoacrylate ester production and in particular
reaction; and direct acylation reactions of alcohols with
methods which can be used for production of monomers
cyanopropionyl chloride.
5,504,252
3
4
The invention is particularly advantageous for preparing
cyanoacrylate esters of C8 or higher alcohols, including
aliphatic and aromatic alcohols, for instance C8-C22 hydro
carbon alcohols and alkoxylated hydrocarbon alcohols such
matic selenic acid is insoluble in common organic solvents
as ethoxylated nonyl phenol and similar surfactant com
pounds. The inventive method can also be used to prepare
and so is readily separated from the cyanoacrylate. In the
case of the two-phase reaction described above separation of
plural functional cyanoacrylate compounds, i.e. from cyano
propionate esters of plural hydroxy functional compounds.
the cyanoacrylate ester is accomplished simply by separa—
tion of the organic layer.
Such plural hydroxy functional compounds can be simple
diols, triols or tetraols such as ethylene glycol, propylene
recycled by reduction to the corresponding diaryldiselenide
glycol, 1,3-propane diol, l,4,-butanediol, trimethylolpro
in accordance with the known method described in the Reich
pane, 1,6-hexanediol, pentaerythritol, diethylene glycol, tet
et.al. reference described above, followed by conversion of
the diaryldiselenide to a selenoaryl halide by reaction with
raethylene glycol and the like or oligomeric prepolymer
compounds such as polyethylene glycol, hydroxy terminated
polybutadiene, hydroxy terminated polyesters and the like.
The arylselenyl halide is suitably prepared from a diaryl
At temperatures above about 0° C. elimination of the aryl
selenic acid occurs spontaneously without added reactant or
catalyst to yield the desired cyanoacrylate ester. The aro
The arylselenic acid byproduct of the reaction can be
chlorine, bromine or iodine.
15
EXAMPLES
diselenide such as diphenyldiselenide by addition of the
molecular halogen X2. Suitable Ar groups are substituted or
unsubstituted phenyl groups. Suitable phenyl group substi~
Ethyl cyanopropionate was obtained from TCI America
and was used without further puri?cation. Diphenyl dis
tutions include halo, alkyl, alkoxy and haloalkyl. Speci?c
examples of substitutions include methyl, ethyl, phenyl,
chloro, ?uoro, tri?uoromethyl, methoxy and ethoxy. Prefer
recrystallized from ethanol prior to use. THF was distilled ‘
ably X is Br.
Examples of bases of su?icient strength to abstract an ot-H
atom from the cyanopropionate ester include the alkali
elenide was purchased from Aldrich or Janssen and was
from sodium/benzophenone immediately before use.
Sodium hydride was purchased from Aldrich as a 95%
powder and was stored in a desiccator.
Reaction glassware was oven dried before use. All glass
25
ware was immersed overnight in 0.5M H2804, rinsed with
deionized water and oven dried. All transfers of dried
solvents were performed with a syringe.
hydride bases NaH, KH, LiH, and alkylalkalides, such as
n-butyllithium. Alkali hydride bases are preferred as the
byproduct H2 is removed continuously as a gas driving the
reaction to completion. Alkali-amide bases, such as lithium
diisopropyl amide, and alkoxide bases, such as sodium
methoxide, are generally undesirable as they introduce addi~
Proton NMR spectra were obtained on a Varian Gemini
30 300 MHZ NMR spectrometer. IR analyses were done on an
ATI Mattson Genesis Series FI‘IR.
tional amine or alcohol by-products which may be more
di?icult to completely remove during work-up of the ot-se
lenoaryl-ot-cyanopropionate ester.
Isolation and puri?cation of the ot~selenoaryl-or-cyano~
propionate ester can usually be readily accomplished by
EXAMPLE 1
PREPARATION OF 2-OCTYL
CYANOACRYLATE
35
dissolution in a suitable solvent such as ether (diethyl ether)
and aqueous extraction of the solution followed by evapo
ration of the solvent. In general further puri?cation is
The method of this example may be represented by the
following equation:
unnecessary but in some cases it can be bene?cial. Further 40
puri?cation can for instance crystallization, suitably from a
cooled ether solution.
The cyanoacrylate ester is formed by an oxidation/elimi
nation reaction. The mechanism is believed to involve two
steps which occur concurrently at ambient temperature but 45
which can be separated into two stages if the oxidation is
carried out at temperatures no higher than about 0° C.
Reaction at temperatures above 0° C. is preferred as there is
no bene?t to isolating the intermediate selenoxide product of
the oxidation reaction. Temperatures is excess of about 40°
C. are also preferably avoided because the cyanoacrylate
product may polymerize at elevated temperatures and
because the reaction is highly exothermic and can become
di?icult to control at higher temperatures.
Suitable oxidizing agents are peroxide compounds and
ozone. Hydrogen peroxide is generally preferred as it is
inexpensive, effective and relatively easy to handle. Other
oxidizing agents which may be particularly useful in some
circumstances include m-chloroperbenzoic acid and sodium
iodate.
55
CH3
CH3
\l Y
CH2
1
CH3
2
PHENYLSELENIUM BROMIDE
To a 3-neck 250 ml ?ask, equipped with a nitrogen inlet,
magnetic stirrer, and rubber septum, was added diphenyl
diselenide (20.9 g, 67 mmol) and THE‘ (100 ml) under
nitrogen. Bromine (9.8 g, 61 mmol) was added by syringe.
The solution was stirred for 5 minutes.
2-Octyl Cyanopropionate phenylselenide (1)
To a 4-neck 500 ml ?ask, equipped with a condenser,
60
mechanical stirrer, thermometer, and nitrogen inlet, was
added sodium hydride (3.9 g, 153 mmol) and THE (250 m1)
The oxidation reaction is suitably carried out in a two
under nitrogen. 2-octyl-2-cyanopropionate (20 g, 115 mmol)
phase reaction in which the ot-selenoaryl-ot-cyanopropionate
was added over 10 min. and the reaction mixture was stirred
for 1 hour at room temperature. A solution of phenylsele~
ester is dissolved in a hydrophobic solvent such as methyl
ene chloride, and the hydrogen peroxide is added as a
solution in water, the two phases being vigorously agitated
to effect reaction between the reactants in the respective
phases.
nium bromide, prepared by the above method, was added by
65
syringe. The reaction mixture was stirred for 1 hour and
added to 250 ml each of ether and sat. aq. NaHCO3. The
organic layer was washed twice with 250 ml of H20 and
5,504,252
5
6
once with 250 ml sat. aq. NaCl. The organic layer was
the mixture was cooled in an ice bath. The bis-phenylse
separated, dried (MgSO4) and ?ltered. Solvent was removed
under reduced pressure. Yield=43.2 g (quant); NMR 5
lenide precipitated, was ?ltered, and washed with 5 ml of
cold ether. Yield =6.5 g (29%), M.P.=1l3° C.; NMR 5
(CDCl3) 7.75 (d, 2H), 7.40 (rn, 3H), 4.85 (m, 2H), 1.80 (s,
3H), 0.8—1.70 (m, 16H); IR (neat) 2333, 1734, 1251 cm“.
(CDCI3) 7.75 (d, 4H), 7.40 (m, 6H), 3.95 (m, 4H), 1.85 (s,
5
2-Octyl Cyanoacrylate (2)
6H), 1.40 (br s, 4H); IR (KBr) 2231, 1730, 1234 cm“.
1,4 Butanediol dicyanoacrylate (BDDCA)
To a 500 ml ?ask, equipped with a condenser, mechanical
stirrer, thermometer, and addition funnel, was added the
stirrer, thermometer, and addition funnel, was added bis
crude 2-octyl propionate phenylselenide (43.2 g, 115 mmol)
and methylene chloride (300 ml). Hydrogen peroxide, 30%
phenyselenide (6.5 g, 12 mmol) and methylene chloride (50
ml). Hydrogen peroxide, 30% (11.6 g, 102 mmol) was
(47 g, 418 mmol) was dissolved in water (30 ml) and added
to the reaction ?ask over 15 minutes. The reaction tempera
ture was kept at 20°—30° C. with an ice bath. After the
addition was complete, the reaction mixture was stirred for
1 hour at room temperature. The organic layer was separated
dissolved in water (8 ml) and added slowly to the reaction
To a 250 ml ?ask, equipped with a condenser, mechanical
?ask over 10 min. The temperature was maintained at
20°~30° C. with an ice bath. After the addition was com
plete, the reaction mixture was stirred for 2 hours at room
separated, dried (anhydr. silicic acid), and ?ltered. Solvent
temperature. The organic layer was separated and washed
with 50 ml of water The organic layer was separated, dried
(anhydr. silicic acid) and ?ltered into a ?ask containing
was removed under reduced pressure. The crude product
was distilled under vacuum. Yield=14.4 g (60%), B.P.=95°
densed under reduced pressure. Because of its reactivity,
and washed once with 100 ml of H20. The organic layer was
C./1.0 mm Hg; NMR 5 (CDCl3) 7.05 (s, 1H), 6.60 (s, 1H),
5.05 (m, 2H), 0.8-1.7 (m, 16H); IR (neat) 2236, 1732, 1649,
1287 cm_1; strong acid 51 ppm.
0.015 g of methanesulfonic acid. The solution was con
20 BDDCA was kept as a solution until just prior to use.
Solvent was evaporated under vacuum in a desiccator from
a plastic beaker, which had been immersed overnight in
EXAMPLE 2
Preparation of 1,4 Butanediol dicyanoacrylate (BDDCA)
1,4 Butanediol dicyanopropionate
25
,8 (CDCI3) 7.10 8(s, 2H), 6.65 (s, 2H), 4.35 (br t, 4H), 1.90
(br t, 4H); IR (KBr) 3.32 2237, 1729, 1615 cm‘l. TGA
analysis showed that BDDCA homopolymer decomposed at
To a 1000 ml 3-neck ?ask equipped with a Dean-Stark
trap, condenser, thermometer, and nitrogen inlet, was added
ethyl-2-cyanopropionate (50.8 g, 400 mmol), 1,4 butanediol
(15.8 g, 175 mmol), p-toluenesulfonic acid (3 g, 16 mmol),
30
and toluene (500 ml) under nitrogen. The solution was
heated to re?ux with stirring. Solvent was removed through
the Dean-Stark trap and replaced with an equal volume of
fresh toluene. After re?uxing for 8 hours, and removing 500
ml of solvent, the solution was cooled to room temperature.
The solution was washed twice with 300 n11 of sat. aq.
resistance on immersion in methylene ‘chloride overnight.
EXAMPLES 3-7
of sat. aq. NaCl . The organic layer was separated, dried
(MgSO4), and ?ltered. Solvent was removed under reduced
When example 1 is repeated except that equivalent
amounts of phenyl 2-cyanopropionate, 4-ethylphenyl cyano
pressure. The crude product was puri?ed by vacuum distil
propionate, n-octyl cyanopropionate, 4-nonylphenyl 2-cy
lation. Yield:22.3 g (51%), B.P.=172° C. (0.6 mm/Hg);
NMR 5(CDCl3) 4.25 (br t, 4H), 3.60 (q, 2H), 1.80 (br t, 4H),
1.60 (d, 6H); IR (neat) 2252, 1745 cm_1.
anopropionate and stearyl 2-cyanopropionate are substituted
in separate respective experimental runs for the starting
2-octyl 2-cyanopropionate used in example 1 and appropri
ate equivalent weight adjustments are made throughout the
PHENYLSELENIUM BROMIDE
procedure, phenyl cyanoacrylate, 4-ethylphenyl cyanoacry~
late, n~octyl cyanoacrylate, 4-nonylphenyl cyanoacrylate
and stearyl cyanoacrylate, respectively will be obtained in
reasonable purity at the end of the procedure.
50
The solution was stirred for 5 min.
EXAMPLES 8-12
1,4 Butanediol dicyanopropionate bis-phenylselenide
To a 500 ml 4-neck ?ask, equipped with a condenser,
mechanical stirrer, thermometer, rubber septum, and nitro
gen inlet was added sodium hydride (2.7 g, 105 mmol) and
about 65 ° C. higher than ethyl cyanoacrylate homopolymer.
Polymerized mixtures of BDDCA at levels of 1, 5, l0 and 20
parts per hundred in ethyl cyanoacrylate, did not show any
enhancement of thermal stability over the ethyl cyanoacry
late homopolymer but did give signi?cant solvent swelling
35
NaHCO3, twice with 300 ml of H20, and once with 300 ml
To a 3-neck 250 ml ?ask, equipped with a nitrogen inlet,
magnetic stirrer, and rubber septum, was added diphenyl
diselenide (17.2 g, 55 mmol) and THF (100 m1) under
nitrogen. Bromine (7.2 g, 45 mmol) was added by syringe.
0.5M H2504, washed with deionized water and dried. The
solid BDDCA is extremely reactive and was used immedi
ately after evaporation of solvent, because it' polymerized '
within a few minutes in the solid state. M.P.=80° C.; NMR
55
When example 2 is repeated except that an equivalent
amount of the 2-cyanopropionate esters of the following
polyols are substituted in separate experimental runs for the
anhydrous dimethyl formamide (200 ml) under nitrogen.
starting 1,4-butane diol dicyanopropionate used in example
Butanediol dicyanopropionate (10 g, 40 mmol) was added
2 and appropriate equivalent weight adjustments are made
over 10 min. at room temperature, and the reaction mixture
throughout the procedures, the corresponding plural
was stirred for 2 hours. The previously prepared phenylse
lenium bromide solution was added by syringe and the
cyanoacrylate will be obtained in at the end of the procedure:
60
reaction mixture was stirred for 2.5 hours. The reaction
mixture was added to 250 ml each of ether and sat. aq.
NaHCO3. The organic layer was washed twice with 250 ml
bis-hydroxy terminated mixed ortho and para phthalate/
of H20 and once with 250 ml of sat. aq. NaCl . The organic
layer was separated, dried (MgSO4), and ?ltered. Solvent
was removed under reduced pressure. Crude Yield=23.4 g
(quant). To the crude product was added 10 ml of ether and
bis~hydroxy terminated polyethylene glycol 400;
bis-hydroxy terminated polyethylene glycol 1000;
bis-hydroxy terminated polybutadiene;
65
diethylene glycol polyester;
tris-hydroxy terminated adipate/ 1,4-butane diol-glycerine
polyester (1 eq glycerol per molecule.
5,504,252
7
8
What is claimed is:
1. A method of preparing an ot-cyanoacrylate ester of a
separating said ot~cyanoacrylate ester from the arylselenic
acid.
13. A method as in claim 12 wherein said separation step
comprises an extraction of said ot-cyanoacrylate ester into an
preselected alcohol, the method comprising the steps of
preparing a compound which is an ot-selenoaryl-ot-cyano
propionate ester of said alcohol,
oxidizing said ot-selenoaryl-ot-cyanopropionate ester to
organic solvent.
14. A method as in claim 12 wherein said preselected
alcohol is a C8 or higher mono or plural hydroxy functional
the corresponding selenoxide,
eliminating arylselenic acid from said selenoxide to pro- '
duce said ot-cyanoacrylate ester, and
10
separating said ot-cyanoacrylate ester from said arylse
lenic acid.
2. A method as in claim 1 wherein said separation step
comprises an extraction of said ot~cyanoacrylate ester into an
compound.
15. A method as in claim 12 wherein said preselected
alcohol is a compound having more than one hydroxy group
per molecule and said ot-selenoaryl-ot-cyanopropionate ester
is the ester corresponding to the esteri?cation product of
each said hydroxy group with ot-cyanopropionic acid.
16. A method as in claim 15 wherein said preselected
organic solvent.
3. A method as in claim 1 wherein said preselected alcohol
is a C8 or higher mono or plural hydroxy functional com
alcohol is a diol.
pound.
ot-cyanopropionate ester is prepared by reaction of a sele
noaryl halide of the formula:
17. A method as in claim 12 wherein said ot-selenoaryl
4. A method as in claim 1 wherein said preselected alcohol
is a compound having more than one hydroxy group per 20
molecule and said ot-selenoaryl-ot-cyanopropionate ester is
the ester corresponding to the esteri?cation product of each
where Ar is an aryl group and X is Cl, Br or I, with the
ot-cyanopropionate ester of said alcohol.
18. A method as in claim 17 wherein X is Cl.
is a diol.
25
19. A method as in claim 17 wherein X is Br.
6. A method as in claim 1 wherein said ot-selenoaryl-ot
20. A method as in claim 17 wherein Ar is phenyl which
cyanopropionate ester is prepared by reaction of a selenoaryl
is unsubstituted or substituted by one or more halo, alkyl,
halide of the formula:
haloalkyl or alkoxide groups.
21. A method as in claim 12 wherein, after said separation
said hydroxy group with ot-cyanopropionic acid.
5. A method as in claim 4 wherein said preselected alcohol
30
where Ar is an aryl group and X is Cl, Br or I, with the
ot-cyanopropionate ester of said alcohol.
step, said arylselenic acid is recycled by reduction to the
corresponding diaryldiselenide and conversion of said dia
ryldiselenide to a selenoaryl halide by reaction with chlo
7. A method as in claim 6 wherein X is Cl.
rine, bromine or iodine.
8. A method as in claim 6 wherein X is Br.
22. A method as in claim 12 wherein said oxidizing agent
9. A method as in claim 1 wherein, after said separation 35 is hydrogen peroxide and said reaction is e?'ected in an
step, said arylselenic acid is recycled by reduction to the
corresponding diaryldiselenide and conversion of said dia
ryldiselenide to a selenoaryl halide by reaction with chlo
rine, bromine or iodine.
10. A method as in claim 1 wherein said oxidizing step is
agitated two phase reaction mixture, one phase being an
40
aqueous phase containing said hydrogen peroxide and the
other phase being a non-aqueous phase containing said
ot-selenoaryl-(x-cyanopropionate ester.
23. A method as in claim 6 wherein Ar is phenyl which is
effected by reaction of said ot-selenoaryl-ot-cyauopropionate
unsubstituted or substituted with one or more halo, alkyl,
ester with an oxidizing agent selected from the group
haloalkyl or alkoxide groups.
24. A method of preparing an ot-cyanoacrylate ester of a
consisting of peroxide compounds and ozone.
11. A method as in claim 10 wherein said oxidizing agent
is hydrogen peroxide and said reaction is effected in an
agitated two phase reaction mixture, one phase being an
preselected alcohol, the method comprising the steps of
preparing a compound which is an ot-selenoaryliot-cyano
propionate ester of said alcohol, the aryl group of said
aqueous phase containing said hydrogen peroxide and the
other phase being a non-aqueous phase containing said
ot-selenoaryl-ot-cyanopropionate ester.
ot~selenoaryl-(x-cyanopropionate ester being phenyl
which is unsubstituted or substituted with one or more
12. A method of preparing an ot-cyanoacrylate ester of a 50
preselected alcohol, the method comprising the steps of
preparing a compound which is an ot-selenoaryl-ot-cyano
propionate ester of said alcohol,
treating said ot-selenoaryl-ot-cyanopropionate ester with
an oxidizing agent selected from the group consisting
of peroxide compounds and ozone, and subjecting the
reaction mixture at the time of or subsequent to said
treatment to a temperature in excess of 0° C. to produce
said ot-cyanoacrylate ester and arylselenic acid, and
then
55
halo, alkyl, haloalkyl or alkoxide groups, treating said
ot-selenoaryl-ot-cyano propionate ester with an oxidiz
ing agent selected from the group consisting of perox
ide compounds and ozone, and subjecting the reaction
mixture at the time of or subsequent to said treatment
to a temperature in excess of 0° C. to produce said
ot-cyanoacrylate ester and arylselenic acid, and then
separating said ot-cyanoacrylate ester from the arylselenic
acid, said separation step comprising an extraction of
said ot-cyanoacrylate ester into an organic solvent.