Continuously updated synthesis method about 5-Chloro-3-phenylbenzo[c]isoxazole

At the same time, in my other blogs, there are other synthetic methods of this type of compound, 719-64-2, and friends who are interested can also refer to it.

In the chemical reaction process,reaction time,type of solvent,can easily affect the result of the reaction, thereby determining the yield and properties of the reaction product.An updated downstream synthesis route of 719-64-2,5-Chloro-3-phenylbenzo[c]isoxazole, as follows.719-64-2

1) Weigh 180 g of raw material 5-chloro-3-phenyl-2,1-benzisoxazole into 1.5 L of anhydrous methanol and 1.5 L of acetonitrile,After stirring and dissolving, add 10g Pd/C catalyst with Pd content of 3%, stir and mix to form material I,The flow rate of the slurry pump was adjusted so that the flow rate of the material I was 40.0 g/min and entered the preheating module of the microreactor. 2) Adjust the flow rate of the H2 gas flowmeter to 350ml/min, and directly enter the reaction module group and material I to undergo catalytic hydrogenation reaction without preheating.As shown in Figure 2, the molar ratio of 5-chloro-3-phenyl-2,1-benzisoxazole to hydrogen is 1:1.2, the reaction temperature is 80C, the residence time of the reaction is 35s, and the reaction pressure is 1.0Mpa; then enter the cooling module, cooling module temperature is 30 C,Collect the reaction solution from the outlet of the cooling module, recover the catalyst by filtration, and recover the solvent by distillation under reduced pressure.The residue was recrystallized from 80% ethanol solution to obtain the target product 2-amino-5-chlorobenzophenone, 168.96g, yield 92.79%, purity 99.68%.

At the same time, in my other blogs, there are other synthetic methods of this type of compound, 719-64-2, and friends who are interested can also refer to it.

Reference£º
Patent; Heilongjiang Xinchuang Bio-technology Development Co., Ltd.; Ren Jiqiu; Yang Kun; Li Haitao; (10 pag.)CN107935872; (2018); A;,
Benzisoxazole – Wikipedia
Benzisoxazole – an overview | ScienceDirect Topics