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Synthesis of drug intermediates in carbon dioxide

The application of supercritical C0₂(scC0₂) as a solvent for the synthesis of fine and bulk chemicals has been well documented; however its application as a solvent for the synthesis of pharmaceuticals is yet to be exploited fully. To address this issue, two synthetically important reactions have been investigated in scC0₂; chemoselective N-debenzylation and diastereoselective hydrogenation. Chapter 3 details the study of catalytic N-debenzylation in the presence of sensitive functional groups (COMe and Cl). It has been shown that selective N-debenzylation in the presence of a carbonyl (COMe) is difficult to achieve due to the high operating temperatures that are required to facilitate continuous flow debenzylation. N-debenzylation in the presence of chloro- substituents was also investigated. Dechlorination can be a major problem during this reaction however several different strategies were developed to suppress dechlorination including: (i) the correct selection of catalyst support; (ii) selective poisoning of a Pd catalyst; (iii) the addition of acids, such as H₂S0₄ to the reactant stream; (iv) the use of an aprotic co-solvent, such as THF. Chapter 4 covers progress made on the diastereoselective hydrogenation of the pharmaceutical intermediate, rac-sertraline imine. It has been shown that the hydrogenation reaction can be performed with excellent levels of chemo- and diastereoselectivity (cis:trans ratio of 97:3, 0.7 % by-product formation) by performing the reaction as a continuous flow process in the presence of scC0₂ All details of the apparatus, experimental and synthetic procedures are reported in Chapter 2.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:493129
Date January 2007
CreatorsClark, Peter David
PublisherUniversity of Nottingham
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11912/

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