- Source: Yamaguchi esterification
The Yamaguchi esterification is the chemical reaction of an aliphatic carboxylic acid and 2,4,6-trichlorobenzoyl chloride (TCBC, Yamaguchi reagent) to form a mixed anhydride which, upon reaction with an alcohol in the presence of stoichiometric amount of DMAP, produces the desired ester. It was first reported by Masaru Yamaguchi et al. in 1979.
It is especially useful in the synthesis of macro-lactones and highly functionalised esters.
Reaction mechanism
The aliphatic carboxylate adds to the carbonyl carbon of Yamaguchi reagent, forming a mixed anhydride, which is then attacked by DMAP regioselectively at the less hindered carbon, producing acyl-substituted DMAP. This highly electrophilic agent is then attacked by the alcohol to form the product ester.
The in situ formation of the symmetric aliphatic anhydride is proposed to explain the regioselectivity observed in the reactions of aliphatic acids, based on the fact that aliphatic carboxylates are more nucleophilic, and aliphatic anhydrides are more electrophilic towards DMAP and alcohol than their counterparts.
See also
Mitsunobu reaction
Macrolide
References
External links
Yamaguchi esterification—organic-chemistry.org
Investigation of the Yamaguchi Esterification Mechanism. Synthesis of a Lux-S Enzyme Inhibitor Using an Improved Esterification Method. I. Dhimitruka, J. SantaLucia, Org. Lett., 2006, 8, 47–50. Article
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Yamaguchi esterification
- Yamaguchi
- 2,4,6-Trichlorobenzoyl chloride
- Acyloin condensation
- List of organic reactions
- Lactone
- Shiina esterification
- Tsutomu Katsuki
- 2-Methyl-6-nitrobenzoic anhydride
- Shiina macrolactonization