Misplaced Pages

Swarts fluorination

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Swarts reaction)
Swarts fluorination
Named after Frédéric Jean Edmond Swarts
Reaction type Substitution reaction

Swarts fluorination is a process whereby the chlorine atoms in a compound – generally an organic compound, but experiments have been performed using silanes – are replaced with fluorine, by treatment with antimony trifluoride in the presence of chlorine or of antimony pentachloride. Some metal fluorides are particularly more useful than others, including silver(I) fluoride, mercurous fluoride, cobalt(II) fluoride and aforementioned antimony.

Heating the mixture of the metal fluoride and the haloalkane (chlorine and bromine are replaced readily) yields the desired fluoroalkane. In some particularly reactive cases, heating is unnecessary; shaking or stirring the reaction mixture is sufficient. This reaction has a good yield.

The process was initially described by Frédéric Jean Edmond Swarts in 1892.

Mechanism

The active species is antimony trifluorodichloride 2, which is produced in situ from the reaction between antimony trifluoride 1 and chlorine; this compound can also be produced in bulk, according to a patent of John Weaver. This then undergoes a halogen exchange with a haloalkane (here trichloroethylsilane), as in 3, replacing the halogen atom (here chlorine) with fluorine and affording the fluorinated product 4.

References

  1. Acad. Roy. Belg 3(24) p.474 (1892)
  2. "Preparation of antimony trifluorodichloride and fluorination of fluorinatable hydrocarbons and halocarbons therewith - Patent # US 4,438,088 - Google Patents".
  3. Wang, Zerong (2010-09-15). Comprehensive Organic Name Reactions and Reagents (1 ed.). Wiley. doi:10.1002/9780470638859.conrr615. ISBN 978-0-471-70450-8.


Stub icon

This chemical reaction article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: