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Crown ethers applications

With the discovery of the crowns and related species, it was inevitable that a search would begin for simpler and simpler relatives which might be useful in similar applications. Perhaps these compounds would be easier and more economical to prepare and ultimately, of course, better in one respect or another than the molecules which inspired the research. In particular, the collateral developments of crown ether chemistry and phase transfer catalysis fostered an interest in utilizing the readily available polyethylene glycol mono- or dimethyl ethers as catalysts for such reactions. Although there is considerable literature in this area, much of it relates to the use of simple polyethylene glycols in phase transfer processes. Since our main concern in this monograph is with novel structures, we will discuss these simple examples further only briefly, below. [Pg.311]

It was noted early by Smid and his coworkers that open-chained polyethylene glycol type compounds bind alkali metals much as the crowns do, but with considerably lower binding constants. This suggested that such materials could be substituted for crown ethers in phase transfer catalytic reactions where a larger amount of the more economical material could effect the transformation just as effectively as more expensive cyclic ethers. Knbchel and coworkers demonstrated the application of open-chained crown ether equivalents in 1975 . Recently, a number of applications have been published in which simple polyethylene glycols are substituted for crowns . These include nucleophilic substitution reactions, as well as solubilization of arenediazonium cations . Glymes have also been bound into polymer backbones for use as catalysts " " . [Pg.312]

In specific applications to phase transfer catalysis, Knbchel and his coworkers compared crown ethers, aminopolyethers, cryptands, octopus molecules ( krakenmole-kiile , see below) and open-chained polyether compounds. They determined yields per unit time for reactions such as that between potassium acetate and benzyl chloride in acetonitrile solution. As expected, the open-chained polyethers were inferior to their cyclic counterparts, although a surprising finding was that certain aminopolyethers were superior to the corresponding crowns. [Pg.312]

The bulk of the work which has been performed on open-chained crown ether and cryptand equivalents, especially for application to general cation binding studies has been accomplished by Vogtle and his coworkers. Vogtle has reviewed both his own and other work in this field . [Pg.316]

Armstrong and Jin [15] reported the separation of several hydrophobic isomers (including (l-ferrocenylethyl)thiophenol, 1 -benzylnornicotine, mephenytoin and disopyramide) by cyclodextrins as chiral selectors. A wide variety of crown ethers have been synthesized for application in enantioselective liquid membrane separation, such as binaphthyl-, biphenanthryl-, helicene-, tetrahydrofuran and cyclohex-anediol-based crown ethers [16-20]. Brice and Pirkle [7] give a comprehensive overview of the characteristics and performance of the various crown ethers used as chiral selectors in liquid membrane separation. [Pg.131]

There have been a number of different synthetic approaches to substituted PTV derivatives proposed in the last decade. Almost all focus on the aromatic ring as the site for substitution. Some effort has been made to apply the traditional base-catalyzed dehydrohalogenation route to PTV and its substituted analogs. The methodology, however, is not as successful for PTV as it is for PPV and its derivatives because of the great tendency for the poly(u-chloro thiophene) precursor spontaneously to eliminate at room temperature. Swager and co-workers attempted this route to synthesize a PTV derivative substituted with a crown ether with potential applications as a sensory material (Scheme 1-26) [123]. The synthesis employs a Fager condensation [124] in its initial step to yield diol 78. Treatment with a ditosylate yields a crown ether-functionalized thiophene diester 79. This may be elaborated to dichloride 81, but pure material could not be isolated and the dichloride monomer had to be polymerized in situ. The polymer isolated... [Pg.343]

Although crown ethers were often found to be as effective as the best onium salts in PTC, they have only found limited commercial application because of their high cost (10 to 100 times that of quats) and perceived toxicity. Cryptands are even more expensive than crown ethers. [Pg.118]

However, there seems to be some drawback in the solubility or dispersibility of ion-sensing material in silicone rubber. This is mainly because silicone rubber does not contain a large quantity of plasticizer as the membrane solvent, in which neutral carriers can be dissolved easily, unlike in plasticized-PVC ion-sensing membranes. This issue is serious, especially with silicone-rubber membranes containing neutral carriers that show high crystallinity. Valinomycin, a typical ionophore, seems applicable to silicone-rubber-based K" -selec-tive electrodes [7,8,12-14]. Conventional crown-ether-based neutral carriers are also quite soluble in silicone rubber. [Pg.588]

Various types of research are carried out on ITIESs nowadays. These studies are modeled on electrochemical techniques, theories, and systems. Studies of ion transfer across ITIESs are especially interesting and important because these are the only studies on ITIESs. Many complex ion transfers assisted by some chemical reactions have been studied, to say nothing of single ion transfers. In the world of nature, many types of ion transfer play important roles such as selective ion transfer through biological membranes. Therefore, there are quite a few studies that get ideas from those systems, while many interests from analytical applications motivate those too. Since the ion transfer at an ITIES is closely related with the fields of solvent extraction and ion-selective electrodes, these studies mainly deal with facilitated ion transfer by various kinds of ionophores. Since crown ethers as ionophores show interesting selectivity, a lot of derivatives are synthesized and their selectivities are evaluated in solvent extraction, ion-selective systems, etc. Of course electrochemical studies on ITIESs are also suitable for the systems of ion transfer facilitated by crown ethers and have thrown new light on the mechanisms of selectivity exhibited by crown ethers. [Pg.629]

Beside four-coordinate Be2+ structures, a couple of five-coordinate structures are known, e.g., Dehnicke s [BeCl(12-crown-4)]+ (179). The combination of beryllium cations and different crown ethers is of particular interest, not only because the Nobel Prize was awarded in part for the development of crown ethers (15), but also because crown ethers are common building blocks in all kinds of chemistry (180,181), with a wide range of applications. Since Be2+ is the smallest metal ion, the binding modes of Be2+ and crown ethers can lead to unexpected structural motifs. [Pg.560]

The examples summarized in Table 5 and in Sect. 5 of this review illustrate the applicability of RCM to the preparation of various macrocyclic perfume ingredients [30], pheromones [30], antibiotics [31-35], crown ethers [36], cyclic peptides [37],catenanes [38] and capped calixarenes [39]. [Pg.65]

E. Brunet, A. M. Poveda, D. Rabasco, E. Oreja, L. M. Font, M. S. Batra, J. C. Rodrigues-Ubis, New Chiral Crown Ethers derived from Camphor and Their Application to Asymmetric Michael Addition. First Attempts to Rationalize Enantioselection by AMI and AMBER Calculations , Tetrahedron Asymmetry 1994, 5, 935-948. [Pg.142]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.331 ]




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