In organic chemistry, an ortho ester is a functional group containing three alkoxy groups attached to one carbon atom, i.e. with the general formula RC(OR')3. Orthoesters may be considered as products of exhaustive alkylation of unstable orthocarboxylic acids and it is from these that the name 'ortho ester' is derived. An example is ethyl orthoacetate, CH3C(OCH2CH3)3, more correctly known as 1,1,1-triethoxyethane.[1] In total synthesis, bicyclic OBO ortho esters are used as protecting groups for carboxylic acids and esters.
Ortho esters are traditionally, but inefficiently[2] prepared through the Pinner reaction of nitriles and alcohols in the presence of one equivalent of hydrogen chloride. The reaction requires anhydrous conditions,[1] and ideally a nonpolar solvent.[3]: 6 It begins with formation of imido ester hydrochloride:
RCN + R′OH + HCl → [RC(OR′)=NH2]+Cl−
Upon standing in the presence of excess alcohol, this intermediate converts to the ortho ester:[citation needed]
[RC(OR′)=NH2]+Cl− + 2R′OH → RC(OR′)3 + NH4Cl
A major side-reaction converts the alcohol to the corresponding alkyl chloride.[2]
Acid chlorides can also drive the reaction from the corresponding amide, e.g.:[4]: 154
HCONH2 + BzCl → HC(OBz)NH2Cl
HC(OBz)NH2Cl + ROH → HC(OR)3 + NH4Cl + BzOH.
Although a less common method, ortho esters were first produced by reaction of 1,1,1-trichloroalkanes with sodium alkoxide:[1]
RCCl3 + 3NaOR′ → RC(OR′)3 + 3NaCl
Compounds with an adjacent hydrogen atom on R tend to undergo elimination instead.[3]: 12 Traditional esters can be converted to α,α‑dichloro ethers with phosphorus pentachloride. The resulting halogenated compounds undergo ether synthesis like the trichloroalkanes.[4]: 162
Carboxylic acids naturally form a trithio ortho ester when heated with a mercaptan of appropriate stoichiometry.[5] The resulting compound undergoes transesterification to a traditional orthoester in the presence of zinc chloride.[4]: 156
Transesterification from a cheaper ortho ester is also possible;[4] but performs best with unstabilized (electron-poorer) ortho esters. Stabilized ortho-esters tend to collapse to the corresponding non-ortho ester.[2]: 555–556
Examples of orthoesters include the reagents trimethyl orthoformate and triethylorthoacetate. Another example is the bicyclic OBO protecting group (4-methyl-2,6,7-trioxa-bicyclo[2.2.2]octan-1-yl) which is formed by the action of (3-methyloxetan-3-yl)methanol on activated carboxylic acids in the presence of Lewis acids. The group is base stable and can be cleaved in two steps under mild conditions, mildly acidic hydrolysis yields the ester of tris(hydroxymethyl)ethane which is then cleaved using e.g. an aqueous carbonate solution.[9]
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^United States Patent Application 20070049501, Saini; Rajesh K.; and Savery; Karen, March 1, 2007
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