Isoprenol, also known as 3-methylbut-3-en-1-ol, is a hemiterpene alcohol. It is produced industrially as an intermediate to 3-methylbut-2-en-1-ol (prenol): global production in 2001 can be estimated as 6–13 thousand tons.[. Major produce in a world is BASF(Germany) and Kuraray(Japan).]
Synthesis
Isoprenol is produced by the reaction between
isobutene (2-methylpropene) and
formaldehyde, in what is arguably the simplest example of the
Prins reaction.
Reactions
The thermodynamically preferred
prenol, with the more substituted double bond, cannot be directly formed in the above reaction but is produced via a subsequent isomerisation:
This isomerisation reaction is catalyzed by any species which can form an allyl complex without excessive hydrogenation of the substrate, for example poisoned palladium catalysts.
Oxidation (or more technically dehydrogenation) gives the aldehyde (3-methyl-3-butenal), which is used for the industrial synthesis of citral and other compounds. BASF achieves this transformation at scale using a silica-supported silver catalyst.
Uses
Isoprenol is primarily a feedstock used in the production of other more valuable chemicals. Its prenol and 3-methyl-3-butenal derivatives are used together in the formation of
citral, which is used both as an
aroma compound and as a starting material in the production of
such as
vitamin E and
vitamin A.
Isoprenol is also used in the synthesis of some
pyrethroid pesticides.
Notes