In organic chemistry, chiral phosphoric acids are esters of phosphoric acid H3PO4 that have chiral backbones. Well known examples include cyclic diesters derived from the BINOL and TADDOL motifs. These compounds are used in asymmetric catalysis as chiral Brønsted acids and/or hydrogen-bond donors.[2] The conjugate bases are also used in generating chiral ion pairs.[3]
References
- ↑ Klussmann, Martin; Ratjen, Lars; Hoffmann, Sebastian; Wakchaure, Vijay; Goddard, Richard; List, Benjamin (September 2010). "Synthesis of TRIP and Analysis of Phosphate Salt Impurities". Synlett. 2010 (14): 2189–2192. doi:10.1055/s-0030-1258505. ISSN 0936-5214.
- ↑ "Chiral Phosphoric Acids" (PDF).
- ↑ Parmar, Dixit; Sugiono, Erli; Raja, Sadiya; Rueping, Magnus (2014). "Complete Field Guide to Asymmetric BINOL-Phosphate Derived Brønsted Acid and Metal Catalysis: History and Classification by Mode of Activation; Brønsted Acidity, Hydrogen Bonding, Ion Pairing, and Metal Phosphates". Chemical Reviews. 114 (18): 9047–9153. doi:10.1021/cr5001496. PMID 25203602.
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