Acid catalyzed isomerization of substituted diaryls

The invention relates to a method of isomerization of substituted diaryl compounds by treating the diaryl compounds with a strong acid. The invention is further related to a method of isomerizing a mixture of isomers, selectively removing one or more desired isomers and re-isomerizing the remaining...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors Schiraldi, David Anthony, Iretski, Alexei Viktorovich, Sherman, Sheldon Christopher, Tolbert, Laren Malcolm, White, Mark Gilmore
Format Patent
LanguageEnglish
Published 13.08.2002
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Summary:The invention relates to a method of isomerization of substituted diaryl compounds by treating the diaryl compounds with a strong acid. The invention is further related to a method of isomerizing a mixture of isomers, selectively removing one or more desired isomers and re-isomerizing the remaining isomers. A substituted diaryl compound or a mixture of substituted diaryl compounds, such as dimethylbiaryl compounds are isomerized by treatment with a strong acid or mixtures of strong acids in the absence of any additional catalyst. The strong acid or mixture of acids has a Hammett acidity of less than about −12.6. The isomerization reaction conditions such as reaction temperature, amount of acid, and amount of solvent can be adjusted to selectively produce desired isomers in high yields. One or more desired isomers may be produced in high yields by isomerization of substituted diaryl compounds and selectively removing one or more desired isomers from the resulting equilibrium mixture of isomers. The isomer mixture may be re-isomerized subsequent to selective removal of the desired isomer to produce additional amounts of desired isomer. The isomerization may be employed to substantially reduce the amount of at least one isomer substituted in the 2-position or to substantially increase the amount of at least one isomer substituted in at least the 3-position, the 4-position or the 4-position for the production of at least substantially linear or crystalline polymers.