Development of sustainable catalytic methods for organic synthesis
dc.contributor.advisor
Lawrence, Andrew
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Thomas, Stephen
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Lusby, Paul
en
dc.contributor.author
DaBell, Peter
en
dc.contributor.sponsor
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
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dc.date.accessioned
2020-03-17T19:48:52Z
dc.date.available
2020-03-17T19:48:52Z
dc.date.issued
2020-06-25
dc.description.abstract
This thesis covers two separate projects, but both of which can be linked by the overall
aim to develop sustainable catalytic methodology for use in organic synthesis. A
concerted effort has been made to move away from procedures within organic chemistry
that use non-renewable expensive and toxic materials as reagents and catalysts,
particularly those containing second and third row transition metals, and instead to
develop processes that utilise sustainable, abundant and inexpensive reagents, such as
base-metals and main group elements.
The first project was the attempted development of an oxidative ring contraction of
aromatic compounds, with the goal of applying it in the biomimetic total synthesis of
fatouapilosin. The second project concerned the development of the borane-catalysed
enantioselective hydroboration and reduction of propargylic ketones.
Chapter 1 is an introduction to the first project, giving details regarding the isolation and
proposed biosynthetic route to fatouapilosin, as well as giving an overview of the area of
biomimetic total synthesis. The oxidative ring contraction reaction, the use of iron and
copper for oxidation of organic compounds, and the potential of phenols as a renewable
source of carbon are also discussed.
Chapter 2 describes the first total synthesis of the coumarin natural product brosiparin,
an important precursor in the proposed synthesis of fatouapilosin, which was the planned
substrate on which to develop a method of oxidative ring contraction.
Brosiparin was
successfully prepared in a three-step procedure from pyrogallol, with an initial double
demethylation followed by an O-prenylation, then a tandem Wittig olefination/para-
Claisen rearrangement/lactonisation sequence.
Chapter 3 focuses on the oxidation chemistry of brosiparin, and the efforts to develop a
reliable method of oxidative ring contraction. Unfortunately trials with a wide variety of
oxidising agents, including iron and copper catalysts, did not result in the desired
transformation. The use of phenyliododiacetate (PIDA) enabled us to access a masked
ortho-quinone compound, from which further reactions were attempted, including an
interesting aryl-aryl coupling reaction, but the unprotected ortho-quinone proved very
unstable and difficult to work with.
Chapter 4 covers the second project, and starts with a broad introduction to the area of
hydroboration, followed by a more focused look at enantioselective hydroboration and
reduction of ketones. The successful development of an enantioselective reduction of
propargylic ketones using substoichiometric myrtanyl borane with stoichiometric HBpin
is then described. The reaction was shown by 1H and 11B NMR studies to proceed via a
transborylation mechanism, and was applied to other propargylic ketone substrates.
en
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/36899
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/200
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.subject
oxidation reactions
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dc.subject
phenol
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dc.subject
fatouapilosin
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dc.subject
boron
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dc.subject
ketone
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dc.subject
enantioselective boron catalyst
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dc.title
Development of sustainable catalytic methods for organic synthesis
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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