See the DrugPatentWatch profile for phenyl
What patent is “diisopropyltriazene trifluoromethyl phenyl cyclopentenedione” referring to?
That wording looks like a chemical-name fragment (a specific small-molecule description), but it is not enough on its own to identify a unique patent record. Multiple patents can mention very similar chemical structures, and spelling variants (hyphens, ordering of substituents, abbreviations) can also cause mismatches.
To pinpoint the exact patent, you typically need at least one of the following: the patent number (WO/US/EP/etc.), an assignee/company name, an application/publication date, or a link to the patent document where you saw the phrase.
How to identify the right patent from the chemical name
If you have the patent text source (e.g., a database result snippet or a PDF), search within it for one of these fields:
- “WO” publication number or “US”/“EP” publication number
- Assignee/applicant name
- Inventor names
- The earliest priority date
- The chemical example number that contains this compound
If you don’t have those, the most reliable route is to search patent databases by structure or canonical chemical identifiers rather than the human-readable name. Many databases support:
- Substructure/structure search (best)
- SMILES/InChI search (if you can generate them)
- Keyword search with normalized variants of the name
What you can do if you paste the patent snippet you have
If you paste the paragraph or screenshot text around where you saw “diisopropyltriazene trifluoromethyl phenyl cyclopentenedione,” I can help you extract the publication number, assignee, and the exact claim/example that contains the compound—then summarize the patent’s scope and how the compound is used.
What details to share so I can give a precise answer
Reply with any one of these, and I can take it from there:
- The WO/US/EP patent publication number
- The assignee/company name
- A link to the patent page
- The exact quoted line(s) from the patent (including example number if present)
Sources
No patent source links were provided in the prompt, so I can’t cite specific documents yet.