Buy Phenethyl tosylate (2-phenylethyl 4-methylbenzenesulfonate)
Buy Phenethyl tosylate (2-phenylethyl 4-methylbenzenesulfonate)
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- Synthesis: It facilitates the construction of complex molecular architectures in pharmaceutical and agrochemical manufacturing.
- Tosylates in Chemistry: In broader organic chemistry, the tosylate group (often abbreviated as \(OTs\)) is frequently used to convert poor leaving groups (like alcohols) into highly reactive targets for nucleophilic attack, or utilized temporarily as a protecting group. [1, 2, 3, 4]
Buy Phenethyl tosylate (white solid)
para-Toluenesulfonic acid (PTSA, pTSA, or pTsOH) or tosylic acid (TsOH) is an organic compound with the formula CH3C6H4SO3H. It is a white extremely hygroscopic solid that is soluble in water, alcohols, and other polar organic solvents.[6] The CH3C6H4SO2 group is known as the tosyl group and is often abbreviated as Ts or Tos. Most often, TsOH refers to the monohydrate, TsOH.H2O.[6]
As with other aryl sulfonic acids, TsOH is a strong organic acid. It is about one million times stronger than benzoic acid.[6] It is one of the few strong acids that is solid and therefore is conveniently weighed and stored. Buy Phenethyl tosylate (2-phenylethyl 4-methylbenzenesulfonate)
Preparation and uses
TsOH is prepared on an industrial scale by the sulfonation of toluene. Common impurities include benzenesulfonic acid and sulfuric acid. TsOH is most often supplied as the monohydrate, and it may be necessary to remove the complexed water before use. Impurities can be removed by recrystallization from its concentrated aqueous solution followed by azeotropic drying with toluene.[2]
TsOH finds use in organic synthesis as an “organic-soluble” strong acid. Examples of uses include:
- Acetalization of an aldehyde.[7]
- Fischer–Speier esterification[8]
- Transesterification reactions[9]
Tosylates
Alkyl tosylates are alkylating agents because tosylate is electron-withdrawing as well as a good leaving group. Tosylate is a pseudohalide. Toluenesulfonate esters undergo nucleophilic attack or elimination. Reduction of tosylate esters gives the hydrocarbon. Thus, tosylation followed by reduction allows for the deoxygenation of alcohols.

In a famous and illustrative use of tosylate as a leaving group, the 2-norbornyl cation was formed by an elimination reaction of 7-norbornenyl tosylate. The elimination occurs 1011 times faster than the solvolysis of anti-7-norbornyl Para-toluenesulfonate.[10]
Tosylates are also protecting groups for alcohols. They are prepared by combining the alcohol with 4-toluenesulfonyl chloride in the presence of a base. These reactions are usually performed in an aprotic solvent, often pyridine, which additionally acts as a base.[11] Buy Phenethyl tosylate (2-phenylethyl 4-methylbenzenesulfonate)
Reactions
- TsOH may be converted to para-toluenesulfonic anhydride by heating with phosphorus pentoxide.[12]
- When heated with acid and water, TsOH undergoes hydrolysis to toluene:
- CH3C6H4SO3H + H2O → C6H5CH3 + H2SO4
This reaction is general for aryl sulfonic acids.[13][14]
See also
In organic chemistry, a toluenesulfonyl group (tosyl group, abbreviated Ts or Tos[nb 1]) is a univalent functional group with the chemical formula −SO2−C6H4−CH3. It consists of a tolyl group, −C6H4−CH3, joined to a sulfonyl group, −SO2−, with the open valence on sulfur. This group is usually derived from the compound tosyl chloride, CH3C6H4SO2Cl (abbreviated TsCl), which forms esters and amides of toluenesulfonic acid, CH3C6H4SO2OH (abbreviated TsOH). The para orientation illustrated (p-toluenesulfonyl) is most common, and by convention tosyl without a prefix refers to the p-toluenesulfonyl group.
The tosyl terminology was proposed by German chemists Kurt Hess and Robert Pfleger in 1933 on the pattern of trityl[1] and adopted in English starting from 1934.[2]
The toluenesulfonate (or tosylate) group refers to the −O−SO2C6H4CH3 (–OTs) group, with an additional oxygen attached to sulfur and open valence on an oxygen.[3] In a chemical name, the term tosylate may either refer to the salts containing the anion of p-toluenesulfonic acid, TsO−M+ (e.g., sodium p-toluenesulfonate), or it may refer to esters of p-toluenesulfonic acid, TsOR (R = organyl group).
Applications
For SN2 reactions, alkyl alcohols can also be converted to alkyl tosylates, often through addition of tosyl chloride. In this reaction, the lone pair of the alcohol oxygen attacks the sulfur of the tosyl chloride, displacing the chloride and forming the tosylate with retention of reactant stereochemistry. This is useful because alcohols are poor leaving groups in SN2 reactions, in contrast to the tosylate group. It is the transformation of alkyl alcohols to alkyl tosylates that allows an SN2 reaction to occur in the presence of a good nucleophile.
A tosyl group can function as a protecting group in organic synthesis. Alcohols can be converted to tosylate groups so that they do not react. The tosylate group may later be converted back into an alcohol. The use of these functional groups is exemplified in organic synthesis of the drug tolterodine, wherein one of the steps a phenol group is protected as its tosylate and the primary alcohol as its nosylate. The latter is a leaving group for displacement by diisopropylamine:[4][nb 2]
The tosyl group is also useful as a protecting group for amines. The resulting sulfonamide structure is extremely stable. It can be deprotected to reveal the amine using reductive or strongly acidic conditions.[5]
Amine protection – tosyl (Ts)

Tosyl (Ts) group is commonly used as a protecting group for amines in organic synthesis.
Most common amine protection methods
Most common amine deprotection methods
- HBr and acetic acid at 70 °C[7]

- Refluxing with TMSCl, sodium iodide and acetonitrile[8]
- Reduction with SmI2[9]
- Reduction with Red-Al[10]
Related compounds
Closely related to the tosylates are the nosylates and brosylates, which are the abbreviated names for o– or p-nitrobenzenesulfonates and p-bromobenzenesulfonates, respectively.
See also
References
- Merck Index, 11th Edition, 9459.
- Armarego, W. L. F. (2003). Purification of Laboratory Chemicals (8th ed.). Oxford: Elsevier Science. p. 612. ISBN978-0-12-805457-4.
- Guthrie, J. P. Hydrolysis of esters of oxy acids: pKa values for strong acids. Can. J. Chem. 1978, 56, 2342-2354. doi:10.1139/v78-385
- Eckert, F.; Leito, I.; Kaljurand, I.; Kütt, A.; Klamt, A.; Diedenhofen, M. Prediction of Acidity in Acetonitrile Solution with COSMO-RS. J. Comput. Chem. 2009, 30, 799-810. doi:10.1002/jcc.21103
- GHS: GESTIS 510754
- Baghernejad, Bita (31 August 2011). “Application of p-toluenesulfonic Acid (PTSA) in Organic Synthesis”. Current Organic Chemistry. 15 (17): 3091–3097. doi:10.2174/138527211798357074.
- H. Griesser, H.; Öhrlein, R.; Schwab, W.; Ehrler, R.; Jäger, V. (2004). “3-Nitropropanal, 3-Nitropropanol, and 3-Nitropropanal Dimethyl Acetal”. Organic Syntheses; Collected Volumes, vol. 10, p. 577.
- Furuta, K.; Gao, Q.-z.; Yamamoto, H. (1998). “Chiral (Acyloxy)borane Complex-catalyzed Asymmetric Diels-Alder Reaction: (1R)-1,3,4-Trimethyl-3-cyclohexene-1-carboxaldehyde”. Organic Syntheses; Collected Volumes, vol. 9, p. 722.
- Imwinkelried, R.; Schiess, M.; Seebach, D. (1993). “Diisopropyl (2S,3S)-2,3-O-isopropylidenetartrate”. Organic Syntheses; Collected Volumes, vol. 8, p. 201.
- Winstein, S.; Shatavsky, M.; Norton, C.; Woodward, R. B. (1955-08-01). “7-Norbornenyl and 7-Norbornyl cations”. Journal of the American Chemical Society. 77 (15): 4183–4184. Bibcode:1955JAChS..77.4183W. doi:10.1021/ja01620a078. ISSN0002-7863.
- “Nucleophilic Substitution”.
- L. Field & J. W. McFarland (1963). “p-Toluenesulfonic Anhydride”. Organic Syntheses; Collected Volumes, vol. 4, p. 940.
- C. M. Suter (1944). The Organic Chemistry of Sulfur. New York: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 387–388.
- J. M. Crafts (1901). “Catalysis in concentrated solutions”. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 23 (4): 236–249. Bibcode:1901JAChS..23..236C. doi:10.1021/ja02030a007.
Phenethyl p-Toluenesulfonate | CAS 4455-09-8
[TCI]Phenethyl p-Toluenesulfonate, 4455-09-8, …
]Phenethyl p–Toluenesulfonate, 25G, >98.0%(T), 0-10°C · 265,9




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