The major use of chlorobenzene is as a precursor for further intermediates such as
nitrophenols,
nitroanisole,
chloroaniline, and
phenylenediamines, which are used in the production of herbicides, dyestuffs, chemicals for rubber, and pharmaceuticals. It is also used as a high-boiling
solvent in industrial and laboratory applications, for materials such as oils, waxes, resins, and rubber. Chlorobenzene is
nitrated on a large scale to give a mixture of
2-nitrochlorobenzene and
4-nitrochlorobenzene, which are separated and used as intermediates in production of other chemicals. These mononitrochlorobenzenes are converted to related
2-nitrophenol, 2-nitroanisole, bis(2-nitrophenyl)disulfide, and
2-nitroaniline by nucleophilic displacement of the chloride, with respectively
sodium hydroxide,
sodium methoxide, sodium disulfide, and
ammonia. The conversions of the 4-nitro derivative are similar.
Niche and former uses Chlorobenzene once was used in the manufacture of
pesticides, most notably
DDT, by reaction with
chloral (trichloroacetaldehyde), but this application has declined with the diminished use of DDT. At one time, chlorobenzene was the main precursor for the manufacture of
phenol: :C6H5Cl + NaOH → C6H5OH + NaCl The reaction is known as the
Dow process, with the reaction carried out at 350 °C using fused sodium hydroxide without solvent. Labeling experiments show that the reaction proceeds via elimination/addition, through
benzyne as the intermediate. ==Production==