(S)-Siphos - CAS 443965-10-4

(S)-Siphos (CAS# 443965-10-4 ) is a useful research chemical.

Product Information

Canonical SMILES
CN(C)P1OC2=CC=CC3=C2C4(CC3)CCC5=C4C(=CC=C5)O1
InChI
InChI=1S/C19H20NO2P/c1-20(2)23-21-15-7-3-5-13-9-11-19(17(13)15)12-10-14-6-4-8-16(22-23)18(14)19/h3-8H,9-12H2,1-2H3
InChI Key
RIDZEECIONITMW-UHFFFAOYSA-N
Storage
Sealed in dry. Keep cold.

Safety Information

Signal Word
Warning
Precautionary Statement
P261 - P305+P351+P338
Hazard Statements
H302 - H315 - H319 - H335

Reference Reading

1. Rhodium-catalyzed asymmetric hydrogenation of functionalized olefins using monodentate spiro phosphoramidite ligands.
Shou-Fei Zhu, Jian-Hua Xie, Qi-Lin Zhou, Ai-Guo Hu, Xun-Xiang Guo, Yu Fu. J Org Chem. 2004 Jul 9; 69(14): 4648-55. DOI: 10.1021/jo049655z. PMID: 15230585.
Novel chiral monodentate phosphorus ligands, SIPHOS, were conveniently synthesized from 1,1'-spirobiindane-7,7'-diol. The Rh complexes of SIPHOS can catalyze the hydrogenation of alpha-dehydroamino esters in mild conditions, providing alpha-amino acid derivatives in up to 99% ee. Enamides and beta-dehydroamino esters can also be hydrogenated in good to excellent enantioselectivities (up to 99% and 94% ee, respectively). The SIPHOS ligand with smaller alkyl groups on the N-atom afforded higher enantioselectivity. The X-ray analysis of single crystal showed that the structure of Rh/SIPHOS catalyst is [Rh(COD)((S)-SIPHOS-Me)(2)](+), which clarified the configuration of the catalyst with the monodentate chiral phosphorus ligand in Rh-catalyzed asymmetric hydrogenation. A positive nonlinear effect in the relationship of the optical purities of ligand and product was observed in the hydrogenation of dehydroamino acid derivatives. The kinetic study of hydrogenation showed that the reaction is zero order in the concentration of substrate and first order in the concentration of Rh catalyst and the hydrogenation pressure. The rate of hydrogenation decreased when the Rh/L ratio changed from 1:1 to 1:4.
The molarity calculator equation

Mass (g) = Concentration (mol/L) × Volume (L) × Molecular Weight (g/mol)

The dilution calculator equation

Concentration (start) × Volume (start) = Concentration (final) × Volume (final)

This equation is commonly abbreviated as: C1V1 = C2V2

Related Products

USA
  • International:
  • US & Canada (Toll free):
  • Email:
  • Fax:
UK
  • Email:
Copyright © 2024 BOC Sciences. All rights reserved.