Carboxylic acids naturally form a trithio ortho ester when heated with a mercaptan of appropriate stoichiometry.[4] The resulting compound undergoes transesterification to a traditional orthoester in the presence of zinc chloride.[3]Template:Rp Traditional transesterification from a cheaper ortho ester is also possible.[3]
Reactions
Hydrolysis
Ortho esters are readily hydrolyzed in mild aqueous acid to form esters:
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.[8]
↑Hyo Won Lee and Yoshito Kishi (1985): "Synthesis of mono- and unsymmetrical bis-orthoesters of scyllo-inositol". Journal of Organic Chemistry, volume 50, issue 22, pages 4402–4404 Script error: No such module "CS1 identifiers".
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