GB2035294A - Process for producing alkylene glycols - Google Patents

Process for producing alkylene glycols Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB2035294A
GB2035294A GB7834859A GB7834859A GB2035294A GB 2035294 A GB2035294 A GB 2035294A GB 7834859 A GB7834859 A GB 7834859A GB 7834859 A GB7834859 A GB 7834859A GB 2035294 A GB2035294 A GB 2035294A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
alkylene oxide
alkylene
process according
mole
glycol
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB7834859A
Other versions
GB2035294B (en
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Resonac Holdings Corp
Original Assignee
Showa Denko KK
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Showa Denko KK filed Critical Showa Denko KK
Priority to GB7834859A priority Critical patent/GB2035294B/en
Publication of GB2035294A publication Critical patent/GB2035294A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2035294B publication Critical patent/GB2035294B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07CACYCLIC OR CARBOCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
    • C07C29/00Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring
    • C07C29/09Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by hydrolysis
    • C07C29/10Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by hydrolysis of ethers, including cyclic ethers, e.g. oxiranes
    • C07C29/103Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by hydrolysis of ethers, including cyclic ethers, e.g. oxiranes of cyclic ethers
    • C07C29/106Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by hydrolysis of ethers, including cyclic ethers, e.g. oxiranes of cyclic ethers of oxiranes
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07CACYCLIC OR CARBOCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
    • C07C41/00Preparation of ethers; Preparation of compounds having groups, groups or groups
    • C07C41/01Preparation of ethers
    • C07C41/02Preparation of ethers from oxiranes

Abstract

An alkylene glycol is produced by the hydration of an alkylene oxide at 50-200 DEG C in the presence of carbon dioxide and using, as catalyst, a quaternary phosphonium salt of the formula <IMAGE> wherein R<1>, R<2>, R<3> and R<4> independently represent alkyl, alkenyl or aryl and X represents iodine, bromine or chlorine. The alkylene oxide is for example ethylene oxide or propylene oxide.

Description

SPECIFICATION Process for producing alkylene glycols This invention relates to a process for the production of alkylene glycols by the hydration of alkylene oxides.
More specifically, it relates to a process for the production of alkylene glycols by hydrating alkylene oxides in the presence of carbon dioxide using a quarternary phosphonium salt as a catalyst.
Methods have long been known for hydrating alkylene oxides, e.g. ethylene oxide or propylene oxide, to produce the corresponding alkylene glycols, e.g. ethylene glycol or propylene glycol. In these conventional liquid-phase hydration reactions, a very large quantity of water is used. Without the presence of a large quantity of water in the reaction system, the yield of the desired alkylene glycol would be low with the formation of considerably large amounts of by-products including the diglycol and triglycol. Accordingly, it is the usual practice to carry out the liquid-phase hydration reaction at a temperature of 100 to 2000C using a large excess of water, for example 10 to 15 moles per mole of ethylene oxide when producing ethylene glycol from ethylene oxide, and 15 to 20 moles per mole of propylene oxide when producing propylene glycol from propylene oxide.Even when such a large excess of water is used, formation of no small amounts of by-products diglycol and triglycol cannot be avoided. Since the amount of water is large, the reaction product is obtained as a considerably dilute aqueous solution, and vast energy and equipment are required to separate and purify the reaction product after the reaction.
In an attempt to overcome this difficulty of the prior art, a method has recently been suggested which involves hydrating an alkylene oxide in the presence of carbon dioxide to produce the corresponding alkylene glycol. According to this method, the alkylene oxide is reacted with water in the liquid phase in the presence of carbon dioxide and a catalyst at an elevated pressure of, say, up to 180 atmospheres, and an elevated temperature of, say, up to 220 C. The method does not require as much water as is necessitated by the prior art methods, and 1 to several moles, per mole of alkylene oxide, of water is sufficient. The amounts of by-products are small, and the desired alkylene glycol is obtained in concentrated form in high yields.
However, since no good result is obtained without the use of catalyst, it is desired to find out good catalysts for this reaction.
Catalysts which have been suggested for use in the hydration of alkylene oxides in the presence of carbon dioxide include alkali metal halides such as chlorides, bromides and iodides of potassium, sodium and lithium, or quarternary ammonium halides such as tetramethylammonium iodide and tetraethylammonium bromide (British Patent 1,177,877), and organic tertiary amines such astriethylamine and pyridine (German OLS 2,615,595). Generally, these catalysts give fairly good results. In the commercial-scale production of alkylene glycols, however, these catalysts suffer from various defects such as those described in (a) to (d) below. Accordingly, these catalysts are not entirely satisfactory, and no commercial production of alkylene glycol with these catalysts has been performed.
(a) Alkali metal halides tend to corrode the wall of a reactor in a reaction system containing water and maintained at an elevated temperature. This shortens the service life of the reaction apparatus, and an apparatus made of a special corrosion-resistant alloy must be used.
(b) Alkali metal halides and quarternary ammonium halides have a relatively low solubility in alkylene glycols, and therefore, are likely to precipitate as solids in the reaction system during the course of the reaction. Particularly, when separating the product from the reaction mixture, the catalyst deposits as a solid at the bottom of an evaporation device. It is considerably troublesome to remove the adhering catalyst from the bottom of the evaporator. Also, the adhering catalyst is difficult to recycle from the bottom to the reactor for re-use.
(c) As is well known, tertiary amines have a strong unpleasant smell. Such a smell is uncomfortable during handling, and persists in the resulting alkylene glycol. Unless some special purification technique is used, it is almost impossible to remove the smell completely from the alkylene glycol. The quarternary ammonium halides do not have so strong a smell, but will impart an unpleasant smell to the alkylene glycol product. Such smells markedly reduce the market value of the final product. This olfactory defect is especially serious when propylene glycol, for example, is used as an antiseptic aid for food-stuffs, a wetting agent for tobacco leaves, or additives for cosmetics and medicines.
(d) The starting alkylene oxide, depending upon its type, has a very low solubility in water. For example, 1 mole of propylene oxide cannot be completely dissolved in less than about 5 moles of water. In the hydration of alkylene oxide in the presence of carbon dioxide, water is used in an amount of 1 mole or slightly more per mole of alkylene oxide. Hence, the two components do not form a complete homogeneous solution, but phase separation occurs. The phase separation is advanced by the presence of carbon dioxide.
The conventional known catalysts, i.e. alkali metal halides, quarternary ammonium halides and tertiary amines, further advance the phase separation of a mixture of propylene oxide and water. When propylene oxide is to be hydrated in the presence of carbon dioxide using these known catalysts, the separated liquid layer must be very vigorously stirred mechanically especially at the early stage of the reaction to disperse propylene oxide in water.
It has now been found that quarternary phosphonium salts can be effectively used as a catalyst in the hydration of alkylene oxides in the presence of carbon dioxide without involving the aforesaid defects of the conventional catalysts.
The quarternary phosphonium salts have no corrosive action nor offensive smells. They have a high solubility in the alkylene glycol, and a superior catalytic action on the hydration reaction. If the quarternary phosphonium salts are used as catalyst, the reaction can be performed under conditions which are equivalent to, or somewhat milder than, those used in the presence of the conventional catalysts. The quarternary phosphonium salts do not corrode the reaction apparatus, and can afford odorless alkylene glycols with good efficiency. Furthermore, the bottom residue containing the catalyst in solution which is left after the separation of the product can be directly recycled to the reactor for re-use.
It is especially noteworthy that the quarternary phosphonium salts do not advance the phase separation of a mixture of water and an alkylene oxide, e.g. propylene oxide, having a low solubility in water, but on the contrary, they surprisingly have an action of converting this mixture into a single homogeneous phase. For example, a mixture of 1 mole of propylene oxide and 1.1 moles of water separates into two liquid layers, and when any of the conventional catalysts is added to this system, the mixture remains separated and the phase separation is rather advanced. If, on the other hand, a small amount (e.g. 0.012 mole) of triphenylmethylphosphonium iodide is added as a catalyst, this mixture forms a complete homogeneous solution, and the catalyst also dissolves in it completely.The phenomenon of forming such a homogeneous solution is more surprising in view of the fact that the phosphonium iodide has a low solubility in water and propylene oxide and does not completely dissolve in any one of the water and propylene oxide in the aforesaid amounts. The quarternary phosphonium salts have varying solubilities in water and propylene oxide depending upon their types. Formation of a homogeneous solution described above occurs with all the quarternary phosphonium salts used as a catalyst in the present invention This phenomenon has been discovered for the first time by the present invention, and cannot be expected at all from the prior art.The mechanism of forming such a homogeneous solution has not yet been elucidated in detail, but it is theorized that it is based on the surface activating action of the quarternary phosphonium salt and/or the ability of the quarternary phosphonium salt to form a complex with the alkylene oxide. In any case, the formation of such a homogeneous solution has enabled the reaction of an alkylene oxide having a low solubility in water with water to be commercially performed advantageously over the prior art techniques. By adding a quarternary phosphonium salt as a catalyst, a mixture of propylene oxide and water as a homogeneous solution can be fed into a reactor without any difficulty. The reaction can be performed smoothly without performing vigorous mechanical stirring in the reactor.
Accordingly, a tubular reactor can, for example, be used as the reactor, and the starting reactant solution can be passed through it to complete the reaction.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention are described below.
The quarternary phosphonium salt used as a catalyst in the production of an alkylene glycol by the hydration of an alkylene oxide in the presence of carbon dioxide in accordance with this invention is expressed by the following formula
wherein R1, R2, R3 and R4, independently from each other, represent an alkyl, alkenyl or aryl group, and X represents an iodine, bromine or chlorine atoms.
The quarternary phosphonium salt of the above formula can be prepared by a known method from a phosphine of the formula
and a halide of the formula R4X. From the standpoint of various practical aspects such as the ease of production and purification, the cost, and the activity and stability of the catalyst obtained, R1, R2 and R3 preferably represent an acyclic or cyclic alkyl group of 1 to 8 carbon atoms, phenyl, tolyl, xylyl, or benzyl, and R4 is preferably an acyclic or cyclic alkyl group of 1 to 18 carbon atoms, an alkenyl group of 2 to 3 carbon atoms, or benzyl.
Generally, quarternary phosphonium salts of the above formula in which Xis iodine or bromine have higher catalytic activity than those of the above formula in which X is chlorine. When X is fluorine, the compounds show no satisfactory activity.
Examples of suitable catalysts used in this invention include the following: Tripropylmethyl phosph oni u m iodide, tripropylethylphosphonium chloride, tetrapropylphosphonium bromide, tripropylbutylphosphonium iodide, tripropyloctylphosphonium iodide, tripropylcyclohexylphosphonium chloride, tripropylphenylphosphonium bromide, tributylmethylphosphonium iodide and bromide, tributylethylphosphonium bromide, tributylpropylphosphonium chloride, tetrabutylphosphonium iodide, tributylamylphosphonium bromide, tributylhexylphosphonium chloride, tributyloctylphosphonium iodide, tributyldecylphosphonium bromide, tributylcetylphosphonium iodide, tributylbenzylphosphonium chloride, tributylallylphosphonium chloride, tributylcyclohexylphosphonium bromide, triamylmethylphosphonium bromide, triheptylbutylphosphonium chloride, trihexylmethylphosphonium iodide, trihexylbutylphosphonium bromide, trihexyloctylphosphonium chloride, trioctylmethylphosphonium iodide and bromide, trioctylethylphosphonium bromide, trioctylpropylphosphonium chloride, trioctylbutylphosphonium iodide, trioctylamylphosphonium bromide, tetraoctylphosphonium chloride, trioctylcetylphosphonium iodide, trioctylbenzylphosphonium chloride, triphenylmethylphosphonium iodide, triphenylpropylphosphonium bromide, triphenylbutylphosphonium iodide, triphenylheptylphosphonium bromide, triphenylbenzylphosphonium chloride, tritolylmethylphosphonium iodide, trixylylbenzylphosphonium bromide, tribenzylethylphosphonium chloride, tricyclohexylmethylphosphonium iodide, tricyclopentylisobutylphosphonium chloride, dimethylethylphenylphosphonium iodide, and dibutylphenylmethylphosphonium iodide.
The amount of the quarternary phosphonium salt used is at least 0.001 mole%, preferably at least 0.01 mole%, based on the starting alkylene oxide. Although the reaction is more promoted as the amount of the catalyst is larger, the effect is not directly proportional to the amount of the catalyst. In practice, therefore, the catalyst is used in an amount of 0.001 mole% to the amount of saturation with regard to the reactant mixture, preferably 0.01 to 10 mole%.
The starting alkylene oxide is a lower alkylene oxide having 2 to 4 carbon atoms, especially ethylene oxide and propylene oxide.
The amount of water fed is sufficiently a stoichiometrical amount based on the alkylene oxide. In actual commercial practice, it is convenient to use water in an amount somewhat larger than the stoichiometrical amount and up to about 4.0 times as large as it.
The amount of carbon dioxide is not necessarily critical. Usually, however, it is 0.05 to 1 mole, preferably 0.1 to 0.5 mole, per mole of the alkylene oxide.
The reaction temperature, which varies depending upon the type of the starting alkylene oxide, the type of the catalyst, the composition of the reactant mixture at the early stage of the reaction, etc., is generally 50 to 200 C, preferably 110 to 1 60 C. The reaction pressure, which varies according to the amount of carbon dioxide, the reaction temperature, and the extent of advance of the reaction, is generally 3 to 50 kg/cm2. If desired, the pressure within the reactor may be adjusted occasionally. The reaction time is about 30 minutes to about 3 hours.
The reaction proceeds smoothly by merely contacting the starting alkylene oxide, water, carbon dioxide and catalyst intimately under the aforesaid conditions, and gives an odorless alkylene glycol in a high yield.
In commercial practice, the reaction can be advantageously carried out by a continuous process. One embodiment of the commercial operation is as follows: Predetermined amounts of the starting water and alkylene oxide and the quarternary phosphonium salt as a catalysts are mixed in a mixing tank. The mixture which has become a homogeneous solution by the presence of the catalyst is continuously fed into a tubular reactor kept at a predetermined temperature, and passed through it. Carbon dioxide can be introduced into the mixing tank, or into the mixture in transit through a pipe by using a line mixer. The reaction mixture from the reactor is sent to an evaporator where the water and the resulting alkylene glycol are evaporated to obtain a crude alkylene glycol. The crude alkylene glycol is subjected to a purifying step to obtain a high purity product.At the bottom of the evaporator, the used catalyst remains in the form of a solution in a small amount of alkylene glycol. The solution is recycled to the material mixing tank for re-use. Thus, the reaction can be continuously carried out without a loss of the catalyst.
The following laboratory-scale Examples are given to illustrate the present invention.
Example 1 A 100 ml autoclave equipped with a thermometer, a pressure gauge and a stirrer was charged with 31.5 g of propylene oxide and 20.2 g of water. At this time, the liquid separated into two layers. When 4.4 g of tributylmethylphosphonium iodide was added, it dissolved and together with the separated layers, formed a homogeneous solution. Carbon dioxide was fed from a bomb to a pressure of 4.0 g/cm2-G. The mixture was heated by a heater to 155"C, and reacted at this temperature for 2 hours. The pressure inside the reactor first rose to 10.6 kg/cm2.G, then fell to 6.0 kg/cm2.G, and again went up. At the end of the reaction, it was 12.0 kg/cm2.G. The reaction mixture was colorless, clear and odorless. The results of its analysis were as follows.
Conversion of propylene oxide: nearly 100% Selectivity: to propylene glycol 94.8% to dipropyiene glycol 2.3% to tripropylene glycol 0.1% Example 2 A 100 ml autoclave equipped with a thermometer, a pressure gauge and a stirrer was charged with 30.8 g of ethylene oxide, 25.2 g of water, and 6.54 g of triphenylmethylphosphonium iodide. Carbon dioxide was fed from a bombtoa pressureof4.0 kg/cm2G.Themixturewas heated bya heaterto 1500C, and reacted at this temperature for 2 hours. The pressure inside the reactor first rose to 6.5 kg/cm2-G, then fell down to 5.8 kg/cm2.G, and again rose.At the end of the reaction, it was 11.2 kg/cm2.G. The reaction mixture obtained was colorless, clear and odorless. The results of its analysis were as follows: Conversion of ethylene oxide: 98.7% Selectivity: to ethylene glycol 95.7% to diethylene glycol 1.8% totriethylene glycol 0.13% Example 3 The procedure of Example 2 was repeated except that 9.6 g of triphenylpropyiphosphonium bromide was used as the catalyst. The reaction mixture obtained was colorless, clear, and odorless. The results of its analysis were as follows: Conversion of ethylene oxide: 98.9% Selectivity: to ethylene glycol 91.9% to diethylene glycol 3.4% to triethylene glycol 0.25% Example 4 The procedure of Example 1 was repeated except that 9.95 g of triphenylbenzylphosphonium chloride was used as the catalyst. The maximum pressure attained was 10.5 kg/cm2-G. The resulting reaction mixture was colorless, clear, and odorless. The results of analysis were as follows: Conversion of propylene oxide.: 99.8% Selectivity: to propylene glycol 91.2% to dipropylene glycol 2.9% totripropylene glycol 0.18% Examples 5 to 8 The procedure of Example 1 was repeated except that triphenylmethylphosphonium iodide was used as the catalyst in an amount of 10.2 g, 5.16 g, 2.65 g, and 1.01 g, respectively. The resulting reaction mixture was colorless and odorless in each case. The results of analysis were tabulated below.
Selectivity (%) to Conversion of propylene oxide Propylene Dipropylene Tripropylene Example (%) glycol glycol glycol 5 nearly 100 94.1 2.0 0.11 6 nearly 100 93.6 3.55 0.23 7 99.1 91.2 5.60 0.35 8 98.4 88.1 8.64 0.47 Examples 9 to 12 The procedure of Example 2 was repeated except that 6.54 g of each of tetrabutyiphosphonium iodide (Example 9), trioctylmethylphosphonium iodide (Example 10), trioctylbutylphosphonium iodide (Example 11), and trimethylcetylphosphonium bromide (Example 12) was used. The resulting reaction mixture was colorless, clear and odorless in each case, and variations in pressure showed a similar behaviour to that in Example 1. The results of analysis are tabulated below.
Selectivity (%) to Conversion of ethylene oxide Ethylene Diethylene Triethylene Example (%) glycol glycol glycol 9 nearly 100 96.1 1.77 0.14 10 nearly 100 94.7 2.05 0.16 11 nearly 100 94.2 2.4 0.21 12 98.7 91.8 2.9 0.22 Comparative Example 1 A 300 ml autoclave equipped with a stirrer was cooled sufficiently with a dry ice bath, and then charged with 74 g of propylene oxide and 34 g of water. Further, 16 g of dry ice was added. The autoclave was then placed in an oil bath heated at 140 C, and the reaction was performed for more than 2 hours. The pressure inside the reactor gradually rose from the initial 2.5 kg/cm2G, and reached 32 kg/cm2-G at a maximum. No drop in pressure was seen. The reaction mixture obtained had a smell of propylene oxide and a low viscosity, and was colorless.
The conversion of propylene oxide was 66.7%. The selectivities to propylene glycol, dipropylene glycol, and tripropylene glycol were 76.2%, 14.7%, and 0.6%, respectively. Furthermore, 8.0% of low-boiling compounds were formed.

Claims (11)

1. A process for the production of an alkylene glycol, wherein an alkylene oxide is hydrated at a temperature of from 50"C to 200"C in the presence of 0.05 to 1.0 mole, per mole of alkylene oxide, of carbon dioxide and in the presence of, as catalyst, a quarternary phosphonium salt of the formula
wherein R', R2, R3 and R4 independently represent alkyl, alkenyl or aryl, and X represents iodine, bromine or chlorine.
2. A process according to claim 1 wherein R1, R2 and R3 represent an acyclic or cyclic alkyl group having 1 to 8 carbon atoms, a phenyl group, a tolyl group, a xylyl group or a benzyl group, and R4 represents an acyclic or cyclic alkyl group having 1 to 18 carbon atoms, an alkenyl group having 2 to 3 carbon atoms, or a benzyl group.
3. A process according to claim 1 or 2 wherein the amount of the quarternary phosphonium salt is at least 0.001 mole % based on the alkylene oxide.
4. A process according to claim 3 wherein the amount of the quarternary phosphonium salt is 0.01 to 10 mole % based on the alkylene oxide.
5. A process according to any one of claims 1 to 4 wherein the amount of water supplied for the hydration of the alkylene oxide is 1 to 4.0 moles per mole of the alkylene oxide.
6. A process according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the amount of the carbon dioxide fed is 0.05 to 1 mole per mole of the alkylene oxide.
7. A process according to claim 6 wherein the amount of the carbon dioxide fed is 0.1 to 0.5 mole per mole of the alkylene oxide.
8. A process according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the reaction temperature is 110 to 1600C.
9. A process according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the reaction pressure is 3 to 50 kg/cm2.
10. A process according to'claim 1 substantially as described in any one of the Examples.
11. An alkylene glycol when produced by a process as claimed in any one of the preceding claims.
GB7834859A 1978-08-29 1978-08-29 Process for producing alkylene glycols Expired GB2035294B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB7834859A GB2035294B (en) 1978-08-29 1978-08-29 Process for producing alkylene glycols

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB7834859A GB2035294B (en) 1978-08-29 1978-08-29 Process for producing alkylene glycols

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2035294A true GB2035294A (en) 1980-06-18
GB2035294B GB2035294B (en) 1983-01-12

Family

ID=10499317

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB7834859A Expired GB2035294B (en) 1978-08-29 1978-08-29 Process for producing alkylene glycols

Country Status (1)

Country Link
GB (1) GB2035294B (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7728164B2 (en) 2003-06-30 2010-06-01 Shell Oil Company Process for the preparation of propylene carbonate

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7728164B2 (en) 2003-06-30 2010-06-01 Shell Oil Company Process for the preparation of propylene carbonate

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2035294B (en) 1983-01-12

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4160116A (en) Process for the production of alkylene glycols
JP4657206B2 (en) Propylene carbonate production method
US4623736A (en) Arylalkanoic acid process improvement
JPS6351972B2 (en)
GB2035294A (en) Process for producing alkylene glycols
KR800000941B1 (en) Process for the production of alkylene glycols
JPS5913776A (en) Preparation of alkylene carbonate
DE2838030A1 (en) Alkylene glycol prepn. without corrosion of reaction equipment - by hydration of alkylene oxide using quaternary phosphonium salt catalyst and carbon di:oxide
JP4186461B2 (en) Method for producing furfurals
JPS6312048B2 (en)
JP3921843B2 (en) Method for producing ethylene glycol
JP4521027B2 (en) Method for producing dialkyl dicarbonate
EP0118257B1 (en) Optical resolution of 2,2&#39;-bis(diphenylphosphino)-1,1&#39;-binaphthyldioxide
JPS5822448B2 (en) Method for producing alkylene glycol
US8173832B2 (en) Process for producing 2-isopropenyl-5-methyl-4-hexene-1-yl-3-methyl-2-butenoate
EP0037588A1 (en) Method of preparing furfuryl alcohols
CN105308016B (en) Method for Joint Production acetic acid and acetic anhydride
EP0053842B1 (en) Process for preparing cyclopentenolones
US4306100A (en) Process for production of alkenediols
US2475364A (en) Catalytic hydrolysis of unsaturated halides
JPH08208537A (en) Production of unsaturated sulfonic acid ester and unsaturated halide compound
CA1174687A (en) Preparing arylalkanoate esters via 1-haloalkyl aryl ketals and zinc carboxylate catalysts
JPH0228583B2 (en)
Saxena et al. Synthesis of Seyferth Reagents Using Phase Transfer Catalysts
US3644489A (en) N n-dichloroamine salts and their preparation

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19940829