SYNTHESIS AND STRUCTURE-OPTICAL ROTATION RELATIONSHIPS OF HOMOCHIRAL,MONODISPERSE, TARTARIC ACID-BASED DENDRIMERS

Authors
Citation
Hf. Chow et Cc. Mak, SYNTHESIS AND STRUCTURE-OPTICAL ROTATION RELATIONSHIPS OF HOMOCHIRAL,MONODISPERSE, TARTARIC ACID-BASED DENDRIMERS, Journal of the Chemical Society. Perkin transactions. I, (16), 1994, pp. 2223-2228
Citations number
49
Categorie Soggetti
Chemistry Inorganic & Nuclear
ISSN journal
0300922X
Issue
16
Year of publication
1994
Pages
2223 - 2228
Database
ISI
SICI code
0300-922X(1994):16<2223:SASRRO>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
Optically active, homochiral dendrimers of both the zeroth generation 1 and first generation 2 have been synthesized from (2R,3R)-tartaric a cid and phloroglucinol by an iterative, convergent method. These chira l dendrimers comprise 4-tert-butylphenoxy as the surface groups and ph loroglucinol as the branching junctures. The chiral element, which is a derivative of L-tartaric acid, serves as the connecting unit between the surface group and the branching juncture. or between two branchin g junctures. Homochiral (-)-2,3-O-isopropylidene-1,4-di-O-tosyl-L-thre itol 3 was first connected to the surface moiety via mono-O-arylation with 4-tert-butylphenol to generate the optically active mono-O-tosyl ester 4. Excessive O-alkylation of the branching juncture, 5-benzyloxy resorcinol 5, with 2 molar equivalents of the mono-O-tosyl derivative 4, followed by activation of the benzyl-protected phenol moiety at the focal point, led to dendritic 'wedge' 7. Treatment of the phenol 7 wi th a further molar equivalent of intermediate 4 gave the zeroth genera tion dendrimer 1 in 36% overall yield from the di-O-tosyl ester 3. By application of the same reaction sequence, the phenol 7 could similarl y be transformed into the first generation dendrimer 2 in 13% overall yield from homochiral diester 3. Investigation on the optical rotation properties of these dendritic compounds showed that their specific ro tations remained essentially constant and that the molar rotations wer e roughly proportional to the number of chiral tartrate units in the m olecule.