Originally posted by Dodoman
I asked a Phd at my university the other day to help point me in the right direction. He told me that the information in most chemical patents are not
written in details (may even contain missleading information) so that noone would replicate it without direct contact with the inventor. Quote: | That is total bullshit . If anything , patents for compositions of matter and chemical processes are about the most detailed disclosures you will
find in the patent literature . They have to be detailed and full disclosures in order to have any legal claim to the things being covered by the
patent . So like other legal documents the patents tend to be filled with fine print that covers every conceivable variation so the patent can hold
up to legal scrutiny or challenges from copycats who would try to steal the technology and claim it is their own invention .
Quote: |
He also told me that phorone is most unliky to form due to the reaction of acetone with HCl but would rather produce mesytyl oxide. I looked this info
in Vogel and it sais that the oppesit is correct. Any way the Phd told me that phorone is most likly to be produced from a hydroxide with acetone
rather than HCl with acetone. | Phorone is not the object of the synthesis , neither is mesitylene . I would
be more interested
in the triacetone dialcohol as a precursor .
Quote: |
So I got this strange idea. Why not make phorone by the reaction of NaOH with acetone then neutralize the solution with HCl and add the equvelent
amount to form the phorone chloride stated by the patent and then peroxidise that. | Phorone is not what you
want to produce . What you want to make is triacetone dialcohol , and then phorone dihydrochloride from reaction of the triacetone dialcohol with HCl
. All of this presuming of course that you still believe that somehow the patent describes reactions which take place but under more complex
conditions than are disclosed by the patent . You are presuming that maybe a trade secret process is involved , and the patents description is an
oversimplification . Quote: |
I'd very much like to know your thoughts on that Rosco. Personelly I like that idea and would probably try the synthesis by this week end.
| Okay try this theory . Acetone is converted in the cold and in the presence of NaOH to triacetone dialcohol
in 10% yield according to a patent process , and isolated by distillation , the unreacted acetone recycled . The triacetone dialcohol is then
converted to phorone dihydrochloride by reaction with HCl gas , or by reaction with aqueous HCl , whichever method works . The phorone dihydrochloride
is then chlorinated with gaseous chlorine , and then peroxidized .
When you have gone through all of this elaborate work you probably will not have the desired compound , and will be saying to yourself that the
trouble and expense would have been effort more rewarded in synthesis of something more straightforward . You see the appeal of the alleged "
DPPP " was ease of synthesis . When you remove that appeal by having to resort to extraordinary methods to accomplish the synthesis , well how
much appeal actually remains for the
" DPPP " in comparison with more well known and absolutely proven materials which are made straightforwardly by simpler methods ?
| |