The nitrophenyl ethers are a well-known class of herbicides, the oldest member of which was
nitrofen, invented by
Rohm & Haas and first registered for sale in 1964. This area of chemistry became very competitive, with the
Mobil Oil Corporation's filing in 1969 and grant in 1974 of a patent to the
structural analog with a COOCH3 group adjacent to the nitro group of nitrofen. This product,
bifenox, was launched with the
brand name Mowdown in 1981. Meanwhile, Rohm & Haas introduced acifluorfen (as its sodium salt with brand name Blazer) in 1980, having developed it under the code number RH-6201. It had much improved properties including a wider spectrum of herbicidal effect and good safety to soybean crops. The first patent for the material was published in December 1975, although an earlier Belgian patent published in September 1973 had described related chemistry. ==Synthesis==