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Biphenyl (also known as diphenyl, phenylbenzene, 1,1′-biphenyl, lemonene An obscure name, according to or BP) is an that forms colorless crystals. Particularly in older literature, compounds containing the consisting of biphenyl less one hydrogen (the site at which it is attached) may use the prefixes xenyl or diphenylyl.

It has a distinctively pleasant smell. Biphenyl is an aromatic hydrocarbon with a molecular formula (C6H5)2. It is notable as a starting material for the production of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), which were once widely used as fluids and agents.

Biphenyl is also an intermediate for the production of a host of other such as , optical brighteners, products, and . Biphenyl is in water, but soluble in typical . The biphenyl molecule consists of two connected .


Properties and occurrence
Biphenyl is a solid at room temperature, with a melting point of . In the gas phase the molecule exists in two twisted forms with an angle between the planes of the two rings of 44.4(2)°. In the room-temperature solid, biphenyl is crystalline with P2/c, which does not allow for crystals. In the first structure determination in the solid state the molecule was described as perfectly planar within the limits of error. The planar arrangement in the crystalline phase I is assumed to result from dynamic disorder, i.e. it represents an average of two twisted structures. The lower temperature solid phases II and III have been described as modulated structures with the biphenyl molecules being locked in one of the two non-planar conformations with torsion angles ranging from 9 to 21°. A study from 2021 concludes that in the crystalline phase at 100 K there is no double-well potential associated with the two twisted conformations, but the potential energy is minimized to zero twist. Relative to the free molecule it represents therefore a transition state of inversion stabilized by the intermolecular interactions in a molecular crystal.

Biphenyl occurs naturally in , , and and can be isolated from these sources via . It is produced industrially as a byproduct of the dealkylation of to produce :

The other principal route is by the of :
Annually 40,000,000 kg are produced by these routes.

In the laboratory, biphenyl can also be synthesized by treating phenylmagnesium bromide with copper(II) salts.

It can also be prepared using diazonium salts. When is treated with NaNO2+dilute HCl at 5°C, it yields benzene diazonium chloride. When this is further reacted with benzene, biphenyl is formed. This is known as the Gomberg–Bachmann reaction.

Ph-NH2->\text{NaNO}_2\text{(aq),T\text{=273-278K} Ph-N2+ ->\text{Ph-H, Ph-Ph


Reactions and uses
Lacking functional groups, biphenyl is fairly non-reactive, which is the basis of its main application: in a with , as a heat transfer agent. This mixture is stable to 400 °C.

Biphenyl does undergo which, followed by base hydrolysis, produces p-hydroxybiphenyl and p, p′-dihydroxybiphenyl, which are useful fungicides. In other substitution reactions, it undergoes halogenation. Polychlorinated biphenyls were once popular pesticides.


Li biphenyl radical
Lithium biphenyl contains the , which is highly reducing (−3.1 V vs Fc+/0). Several solvates of alkali metal salts of biphenyl anion have been characterized by X-ray crystallography. These salts, usually prepared in situ, are versatile reducing agents. Lithium biphenyl offers some advantages relative to the related lithium naphthene. Related to Li/biphenyl is the derivative with tert-butyl groups on the biphenyl.


Stereochemistry
Rotation about the single bond in biphenyl, and especially its ortho-substituted derivatives, is . For this reason, some substituted biphenyls show ; that is, the individual C2--isomers are . Some derivatives, as well as related molecules such as , find application as in asymmetric synthesis. In the case of unsubstituted biphenyl, the equilibrium torsional angle is 44.4° and the torsional barriers are quite small, 6.0 kJ/mol at 0° and 6.5 kJ/mol at 90°. Adding ortho substituents greatly increases the barrier: in the case of the 2,2'-dimethyl derivative, the barrier is 17.4 kcal/mol (72.8 kJ/mol).


Biphenyl compounds
Substituted biphenyls have many uses. They are prepared by various coupling reactions including the Suzuki-Miyaura reaction and the . Polychlorinated biphenyls were once used as cooling and insulating fluids and polybrominated biphenyls are . The biphenyl motif also appears in such as and . The abbreviation E7 stands for a mixture consisting of several cyanobiphenyls with long aliphatic tails used commercially in liquid crystal displays (5CB, 7CB, 8OCB and 5CT). A variety of derivatives are used in dyes and polymers. Research into biphenyl liquid crystal candidates mainly focuses on molecules with highly polar heads (for example cyano or halide groups) and aliphatic tails. It is part of the active group in the antibiotic .


Safety and bioactivity
Biphenyl prevents the growth of molds and , and is therefore used as a (, in combination with E231, E232 and E233), particularly in the preservation of fruits during transportation. It is no longer approved as a food additive in the European Union.

Biphenyl is mildly toxic, but can be degraded biologically by conversion into nontoxic compounds. Some are able to hydroxylate biphenyl and its polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs).


See also


Notes
  • "Isolation and Identification of Biphenyls from West Edmond Crude Oil". N. G. Adams and D. M. Richardson. Analytical Chemistry 1953 25 (7), 1073–1074.
  • Biphenyl (1,1-Biphenyl). Wiley/VCH, Weinheim (1991), .


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