1946 and the Early History of Hydrosilylation

Molecules. 2022 Jul 6;27(14):4341. doi: 10.3390/molecules27144341.

Abstract

Three events occurred in the second half of 1946 in three adjoining US States (NJ, NY, and PA) which marked the birth of Hydrosilylation Technology. They occurred before the landmark 1957 JACS paper and the 1958 issued US patent by Speier et al. and before Chalk and Harrod named the reaction. First, on 27 June 1946, Mackenzie et al., of Montclair Research Corp., applied for a patent to prepare addition compounds of hydridosilanes and unsaturated organic compounds. Then, on 9 October 1946, Wagner and Strother of Union Carbide Corp. applied for a patent on a process to produce organic compounds of silicon with Si-C bonds by reacting a hydridosilane and an alkene or alkyne in the presence of a catalyst metal of the platinum group. Finally, Sommer et al., submitted a paper on peroxide-catalyzed hydrosilylation to JACS on 17 December 1946. It was published in January 1947. The landmark patent interference § and priority § case law associated with the Mackenzie et al. and Wagner et al., applications is well known to patent attorneys. This presentation will retrace the origins of hydrosilylation and report events (1946-1960) in the history of the reaction that are most probably unknown to most authors and presenters of hydrosilylation investigations. George Wagner's contribution to the birth of this technology is also highlighted.

Keywords: Ellis-Foster; Montclair; Sommer; Speier; Union Carbide; Wagner; history; hydrosilylation; peroxide; platinum.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Alkenes
  • Alkynes*
  • Catalysis
  • Silicon* / chemistry

Substances

  • Alkenes
  • Alkynes
  • Silicon

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.