Diethyl D-(-)-Tartrate - CAS 13811-71-7

Diethyl D-(-)-Tartrate (CAS# 13811-71-7) is used as a chiral reagent in a host of chemical reactions, suhc as marin toxin and antitumor agent phorboxazole A, or asymmetric syntheses of S,S-dialkyl-substituted sulfoximines.

Product Information

Canonical SMILES
CCOC(=O)C(C(C(=O)OCC)O)O
InChI
InChI=1S/C8H14O6/c1-3-13-7(11)5(9)6(10)8(12)14-4-2/h5-6,9-10H,3-4H2,1-2H3/t5-,6-/m0/s1
InChI Key
YSAVZVORKRDODB-WDSKDSINSA-N
Purity
≥ 98 %, ≥ 95 % e.e.
MDL
MFCD00064451
Physical State
Liquid
Appearance
Colorless oil-like liquid
Storage
Room temperature.
Boiling Point
162 ℃ / 19 mmHg
Melting Point
17 ℃
Flash Point
93.4 °C(200.1 °F)
Density
1.205 g/mL
Optical Activity
-8.1 to -7.5 (neat)
Solubility
Insoluble in water.
Refractive Index
1.45
TSCA
No
WGK Germany
3

Safety Information

Precautionary Statement
P210 - P280 - P370+P378q - P501c
Hazard Statements
H315 - H319 - H335

Reference Reading

1. A practical and azide-free synthetic approach to oseltamivir from diethyl d-tartrate.
Feng-Quan Li, Albert S C Chan, Gui Lu, Rui-Bin Wang, Yong-Bo Li, Jiang Weng, Can Liu. J Org Chem. 2010 May 7; 75(9): 3125-8. DOI: 10.1021/jo100187m. PMID: 20394411.
A short and practical synthesis of oseltamivir was accomplished in 11 steps from inexpensive and abundant diethyl D-tartrate starting material. This azide-free route featured an asymmetric aza-Henry reaction and a domino nitro-Michael/Horner-Wadsworth-Emmons (HWE) reaction as the key steps to construct the relevant cyclohexene ring of the product, which provided an economical and practical alternative for the synthesis of oseltamivir.
2. Two-chiral component microemulsion ekc - chiral surfactant and chiral oil. Part 2: diethyl tartrate.
Joe P Foley, Kimberly A Kahle. Electrophoresis. 2007 Aug; 28(15): 2644-57. DOI: 10.1002/elps.200600747. PMID: 17597467.
In this second study on dual-chirality microemulsions containing a chiral surfactant and a chiral oil, a less hydrophobic and lower interfacial tension chiral oil, diethyl tartrate, is employed (Part 1, Foley, J. P. et al.., Electrophoresis, DOI: 10.1002/elps.200600551). Six stereochemical combinations of dodecoxycarbonylvaline (DDCV: R, S, or racemic, 2.00% w/v), racemic 2-hexanol (1.65% v/v), and diethyl tartrate (D, L, or racemic, 0.88% v/v) were examined as pseudostationary phases (PSPs) for the enantioseparation of six chiral pharmaceutical compounds: pseudoephedrine, ephedrine, N-methyl ephedrine, metoprolol, synephrine, and atenolol. Average efficiencies increased with the addition of a chiral oil to R-DDCV PSP formulations. Modest improvements in resolution and enantioselectivity (alpha(enant)) were achieved with two-chiral-component systems over the one-chiral-component microemulsion. Slight enantioselective synergies were confirmed using a thermodynamic model. Results obtained in this study are compared to those obtained in Part 1 as well as those obtained with chiral MEEKC using an achiral, low-interfacial-tension oil (ethyl acetate). Dual-chirality microemulsions with the more hydrophobic oil dibutyl tartrate yielded, relative to diethyl tartrate, higher efficiencies (100,000-134,000 vs. 80,800-94,300), but lower resolution (1.64-1.91 vs. 2.08-2.21) due to lower enantioselectivities (1.060-1.067 vs. 1.078-1.081). Atenolol enantiomers could not be separated with the dibutyl tartrate-based microemulsions but were partially resolved using diethyl tartrate microemulsions. A comparable single-chirality microemulsion based on the achiral oil ethyl acetate yielded, relative to diethyl tartrate, lower efficiency (78 300 vs. 91 600), higher resolution (1.99 vs. 1.83), and similar enantioselectivities.
3. Separation of corticosteroids by microemulsion ekc with diethyl l-tartrate as the oil phase.
Guan-Ren Wang, Chuen-Ying Liu, Tse-Hsien Chen, Kuan-Pin Huang, Chi-Hung Wu. Electrophoresis. 2007 Oct; 28(20): 3691-6. DOI: 10.1002/elps.200700358. PMID: 17893939.
A novel microemulsion based on a mixture of diethyl L-tartrate (DET) and SDS was developed for the microemulsion EKC (MEEKC) determination of structurally related steroids. The system consisted of 0.5% w/w DET, 1.7% w/w SDS, 1.2% w/w 1-butanol, 89.6% w/w phosphate buffer (40 mM, pH 7.0), and 7% w/w ACN. With an applied voltage of +10 kV, a baseline separation of aldosterone (A), cortisone acetate (CA), dexamethasone (D), hydrocortisone (H), hydrocortisone acetate (HA), prednisolone (P), prednisolone acetate (PA), prednisone (Ps), triamcinolone (T), and triamcinolone acetonide (TA) could be achieved. Under the optimized conditions, the reproducibility of the retention time (n = 4) for most of the compounds was less than +/-0.8% with the exception of A, Ps, and T. The average number of theoretical plates was 18 800 plates/m. The results were compared with those achieved by the modified micellar EKC (MEKC). MEEKC showed obvious advantages over MEKC for the separation of highly hydrophobic substances. To further evaluate the system, we tested the MEEKC method by analyzing corticosteroids in a spiked urine sample.
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