Hydrodealkylation

Chemical reaction

Hydrodealkylation is a chemical reaction that often involves reacting an aromatic hydrocarbon, such as toluene, in the presence of hydrogen gas to form a simpler aromatic hydrocarbon devoid of functional groups. An example is the conversion of 1,2,4-trimethylbenzene to xylene.[1] This chemical process usually occurs at high temperature, at high pressure, or in the presence of a catalyst. These are predominantly transition metals, such as chromium or molybdenum.

Examples

  • Toluene hydrodealkylation to benzene
  • Transalkylation

References

  1. ^ Free Patents Online
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Functional groups
Hydrocarbons
(only C and H)Only carbon,
hydrogen,
and oxygen
(only C, H and O)
R-O-R
carbonyl
carboxy
Only one
element,
not being
carbon,
hydrogen,
or oxygen
(one element,
not C, H or O)
Nitrogen
Phosphorus
Sulfur
Boron
Selenium
Tellurium
Halo
Other
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