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2516-33-8

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2516-33-8 Usage

Description

Cyclopropyl carbinol (also known as Cyclopropanemethanol) is an anaesthetic. Cyclopropyl Carbinol is used as an intermediate for pharmaceuticals, agrochemical, and other organic synthesis such as for the applications for electronics chemicals, polymer additives, coatings, adhesives, surfactants, and other applications3. It can also be used for the preparation of cyclopropanecarbaldehyde, cyclopropylmethylsulfonate and dibenzyl cyclopropylmethyl phosphate1. It is also quite useful to for stereoselective synthesis of cycloalkene-fused butyrolactones via cyclopropylcarbinol solvolysis.

Referrence

Marshall, James A., and R. H. Ellison. "Stereoselective synthesis of cycloalkene-fused butyrolactones via cyclopropylcarbinol solvolysis." Journal of Organic Chemistry 40.14(1975):2070-2073.

Chemical Properties

Clear colorless liquid

Uses

Different sources of media describe the Uses of 2516-33-8 differently. You can refer to the following data:
1. Cyclopropylmethanol used to increase selectivity of pyridyl-cinnoline phosphodiesterase 10A, inhibitors against phosphodiesterase 3 (PDE3). Also used in the synthesis of benzodiazapin-2-ones
2. Cyclopropanemethanol is used as an organic chemical synthesis intermediate.

Preparation

The preparation of?Cyclopropyl carbinol is as follows:A 1L three-necked flask was charged with 100 g (1mol) of methyl cyclopropanoate. 57g (1.5mol) of sodium borohydride, 500 mL of methanol, and then cooled to 2°C, 66.67g (0.5mol) of aluminum trichloride was added in batches and reacted overnight. The reaction was quenched by the addition of a saturated aqueous solution of ammonium chloride, filtered, and the filtrate was concentrated and evaporated. The product was collected in a yield of 53.49g, a yield of 74.3%.

General Description

Cyclopropanemethanol (Cyclopropyl carbinol, CPMO), a cycloalkanemethanol, is an anaesthetic. The coupling reaction of cyclopropanemethanol with alkynes to form substituted allylic alcohols has been reported. The microwave spectrum of CPMO has been recorded. Its rotational constants and dipole moment have been determined.

Check Digit Verification of cas no

The CAS Registry Mumber 2516-33-8 includes 7 digits separated into 3 groups by hyphens. The first part of the number,starting from the left, has 4 digits, 2,5,1 and 6 respectively; the second part has 2 digits, 3 and 3 respectively.
Calculate Digit Verification of CAS Registry Number 2516-33:
(6*2)+(5*5)+(4*1)+(3*6)+(2*3)+(1*3)=68
68 % 10 = 8
So 2516-33-8 is a valid CAS Registry Number.
InChI:InChI=1/C4H8O/c5-3-4-1-2-4/h4-5H,1-3H2

2516-33-8 Well-known Company Product Price

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  • Alfa Aesar

  • (A12567)  Cyclopropanemethanol, 98%   

  • 2516-33-8

  • 5g

  • 237.0CNY

  • Detail
  • Alfa Aesar

  • (A12567)  Cyclopropanemethanol, 98%   

  • 2516-33-8

  • 25g

  • 761.0CNY

  • Detail
  • Alfa Aesar

  • (A12567)  Cyclopropanemethanol, 98%   

  • 2516-33-8

  • 100g

  • 1926.0CNY

  • Detail

2516-33-8SDS

SAFETY DATA SHEETS

According to Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals (GHS) - Sixth revised edition

Version: 1.0

Creation Date: Aug 11, 2017

Revision Date: Aug 11, 2017

1.Identification

1.1 GHS Product identifier

Product name cyclopropylmethanol

1.2 Other means of identification

Product number -
Other names Cyclopropylmethyl alcohol

1.3 Recommended use of the chemical and restrictions on use

Identified uses For industry use only.
Uses advised against no data available

1.4 Supplier's details

1.5 Emergency phone number

Emergency phone number -
Service hours Monday to Friday, 9am-5pm (Standard time zone: UTC/GMT +8 hours).

More Details:2516-33-8 SDS

2516-33-8Synthetic route

cyclopropanecarboxylic acid
1759-53-1

cyclopropanecarboxylic acid

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With sodium tetrahydroborate In tert-butyl methyl ether at 0 - 50℃; for 24h;95%
With lithium aluminium tetrahydride83%
With lithium aluminium tetrahydride67%
(2-methoxy-ethoxymethoxymethyl)-cyclopropane

(2-methoxy-ethoxymethoxymethyl)-cyclopropane

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With cerium(III) chloride In acetonitrile for 1h; Heating;95%
Cyclopropancarbamid
6228-73-5

Cyclopropancarbamid

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With C24H20ClN2OPRu; potassium tert-butylate; hydrogen In tetrahydrofuran at 110℃; under 10640.7 Torr; for 36h; Inert atmosphere; Schlenk technique;91%
2-(cyclopropylmethyl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethyl-1,3,2-dioxaborolane
1344115-77-0

2-(cyclopropylmethyl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethyl-1,3,2-dioxaborolane

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With rose bengal; triethylamine In ethanol at 25℃; for 12h; Schlenk technique; Irradiation;90%
methyl cyclopropylcarboxylate
2868-37-3

methyl cyclopropylcarboxylate

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With sodium In methanol at 45 - 65℃; for 2h; Inert atmosphere; Large scale;88%
With lithium aluminium tetrahydride In diethyl ether at 0℃; for 1h;85%
Stage #1: methyl cyclopropylcarboxylate With methanol; aluminum (III) chloride; sodium tetrahydroborate at 2℃;
Stage #2: With ammonium chloride In water Temperature; Reagent/catalyst;
74.3%
(cyclopropylmethyl)trifluoroboron potassium hydride

(cyclopropylmethyl)trifluoroboron potassium hydride

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With rose bengal; triethylamine In ethanol at 25℃; for 12h; Schlenk technique; Irradiation;85%
cyclopropropanecarbonitrile
5500-21-0

cyclopropropanecarbonitrile

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With formaldehyd; [ruthenium(II)(η6-1-methyl-4-isopropyl-benzene)(chloride)(μ-chloride)]2 In water; toluene at 90℃;77%
allyl alcohol
107-18-6

allyl alcohol

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
bis(benzonitrile)palladium(II) dichloride In dichloromethane at 0 - 10℃; catalytic cyclopropanation of other unsaturated compounds;72%
bis(benzonitrile)palladium(II) dichloride In diethyl ether; dichloromethane at 0 - 10℃; for 0.5h;72%
bis(benzonitrile)palladium(II) dichloride In dichloromethane at 0 - 10℃;72%
palladium(II) acetylacetonate In diethyl ether at -10℃;45%
With bis(benzonitrile)palladium(II) dichloride In dichloromethane at 0 - 10℃; Yield given;
diiodomethane
75-11-6

diiodomethane

allyl alcohol
107-18-6

allyl alcohol

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With 1,2-dimethoxyethane; zinc In diethyl ether Heating;67%
With lanthanum; iodine In tetrahydrofuran for 5h;67%
cyclobutanecarbonyl m-chlorobenzoyl peroxide
70458-21-8

cyclobutanecarbonyl m-chlorobenzoyl peroxide

A

homoalylic alcohol
627-27-0

homoalylic alcohol

B

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

C

3-butenyl m-chlorobenzoate
70458-29-6

3-butenyl m-chlorobenzoate

D

cyclobutyl m-chlorobenzoate
70458-27-4

cyclobutyl m-chlorobenzoate

E

cyclopropylmethyl m-chlorobenzoate
70458-28-5

cyclopropylmethyl m-chlorobenzoate

F

cyclobutanol
2919-23-5

cyclobutanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With acetic acid; potassium iodide In tetrachloromethane at 26℃; Rate constant; on silica;A 4.3%
B 9.6%
C 19.5%
D 11.8%
E 45.5%
F 6.5%
With acetic acid; potassium iodide In neat (no solvent) at 26℃; Rate constant; on silica;
With acetic acid; potassium iodide In chloroform at 55℃; Rate constant;
With acetic acid; potassium iodide In tetrachloromethane at 55℃; Rate constant;
cyclobutanecarbonyl m-chlorobenzoyl peroxide
70458-21-8

cyclobutanecarbonyl m-chlorobenzoyl peroxide

A

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

B

3-butenyl m-chlorobenzoate
70458-29-6

3-butenyl m-chlorobenzoate

C

cyclobutyl m-chlorobenzoate
70458-27-4

cyclobutyl m-chlorobenzoate

D

cyclopropylmethyl m-chlorobenzoate
70458-28-5

cyclopropylmethyl m-chlorobenzoate

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With acetic acid; potassium iodide In tetrachloromethane at 26℃; Further byproducts given;A 9.6%
B 19.5%
C 11.8%
D 45.5%
Ti(OCH2CH(CH2)2)4

Ti(OCH2CH(CH2)2)4

A

homoalylic alcohol
627-27-0

homoalylic alcohol

B

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

C

Di-(1-butenyl)ether (trans/trans)
22597-56-4

Di-(1-butenyl)ether (trans/trans)

D

bis(cyclopropylmethyl) ether
74976-40-2

bis(cyclopropylmethyl) ether

E

allylcarbinyl cyclopropylcarbinyl ether
74976-38-8

allylcarbinyl cyclopropylcarbinyl ether

Conditions
ConditionsYield
In gas byproducts: CH2CH(CH2)2, CH2(CH)2CH2; decomposition at a pressure of 0.01 mm Hg at 550°C; further compounds: (CH2)2CHCHO (trace), TiO2, H2 (<0.5%), C (4%); NMR; GC; mass spectra;A 37%
B 23%
C 12%
D 10%
E 18%
(2-bromoethyl)oxirane
13287-42-8

(2-bromoethyl)oxirane

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With copper; triphenylphosphine In tetrahydrofuran89 % Chromat.
With copper(l) iodide; lithium dihydronaphthylide radical; triphenylphosphine In tetrahydrofuran 1) -45 deg C, 5 min, -23 deg C, 3 h, r.t.; Yields of byproduct given;89 % Chromat.
(2-bromoethyl)oxirane
13287-42-8

(2-bromoethyl)oxirane

A

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

B

cyclobutanol
2919-23-5

cyclobutanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With copper; triphenylphosphine In toluene Product distribution; other reagent and solvent;
methylcyclopropane
594-11-6

methylcyclopropane

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With phosphate buffer; air; 1,4-dihydronicotinamide adenine dinucleotide at 45℃; methane mono-oxygenase from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath);
cyclopropylmethyl tosylate
1015-45-8

cyclopropylmethyl tosylate

A

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

B

toluene-4-sulfonic acid
104-15-4

toluene-4-sulfonic acid

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With sodium acetate In formic acid; acetic acid at 25℃; Rate constant;
With sodium methylate In ethanol; water at 25℃; Rate constant;
cyclopropylcarbinyl pentamethylbenzenesulfonate
70561-86-3

cyclopropylcarbinyl pentamethylbenzenesulfonate

A

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

B

1,2,3,4,5-pentamethylbenzene-6-sulfonic acid
99861-57-1

1,2,3,4,5-pentamethylbenzene-6-sulfonic acid

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With sodium methylate In ethanol; water at 25℃; Rate constant;
With sodium acetate In formic acid; acetic acid at 25℃; Rate constant;
2-(2-Iodo-ethyl)-oxirane
99700-70-6

2-(2-Iodo-ethyl)-oxirane

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With tert.-butyl lithium 1.) Et2O, pentane, -78 deg C, 5 min; 2.) warming; Yield given. Multistep reaction;
With tert.-butyl lithium In diethyl ether; pentane at -78℃; Product distribution; Effect of various additives or warming.;
cyclopropanecarboxylic acid chloride
4023-34-1

cyclopropanecarboxylic acid chloride

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With lithium aluminium tetrahydride
1,3-bis(cyclopropylcarbinyl)-3-methyltriazene
76387-45-6

1,3-bis(cyclopropylcarbinyl)-3-methyltriazene

A

homoalylic alcohol
627-27-0

homoalylic alcohol

B

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

C

cyclobutanol
2919-23-5

cyclobutanol

Conditions
ConditionsYield
With hydrogenchloride In water; acetone at 22℃; Product distribution; Mechanism;
water
7732-18-5

water

chloro(cyclopropyl)methane
5911-08-0

chloro(cyclopropyl)methane

lithium carbonate

lithium carbonate

A

3-butenyl chloride
927-73-1

3-butenyl chloride

B

Cyclopropylmethanol
2516-33-8

Cyclopropylmethanol

C

chlorocyclobutane
1120-57-6

chlorocyclobutane

D

cyclobutanol
2919-23-5

cyclobutanol

2516-33-8Relevant articles and documents

Competitive reactions of nucleophiles. Solvolyses of cyclopropylcarbinyl and cyclobutyl methanesulfonates in the presence of NaBH4

Majerski,Borcic,Sunko

, p. 301 - 313 (1969)

Cyclopropylcarbinyl (I) and cyclobutyl (II) mesylates were solvolysed in aqueous diglyme with or without added NaBH4 under a variety of conditions. The reaction products were isolated and analyzed by VPC. A mixture containing cyclopropylcarbinyl, cyclobutyl and minor quantities of homoallyl products, was obtained in all cases. The proportion of the unsaturated compound was greater in hydrocarbon than in carbinol products, the composition of the mixture depending upon reaction conditions and the starting mesylate. Thus, solvolysis of both I and II yielded cyclopropylcarbinol and cyclobutanol in a ratio of nearly 1:1, while in the hydrocarbon products methylcyclopropane predominated over cyclobutane by a factor of 3 in the reactions of I and by a factor of 2 in the reactions of II. It was shown that a direct displacement reaction of the BH4 ion on the primary mesylate I is not competitive with the solvolysis and cannot therefore be responsible for the above results. It was found that a better yield in hydrocarbons was obtained with I and II than with (1-methylcyclopropyl)carbinyl (III) and 1-methylcyclobutyl (IV) mesylates. The unexpected fact that the BH4- ion competes more efficiently with water for intermediates formed in solvolyses of I and II than for those of III and IV was confirmed by determination of competition factors of N3- ion vs water. In all cases, intermediates formed from I and II showed more discrimination in their reactions with reagents differing in nucleophylicity than did those formed from III and IV. The results indicate that the attack of the nucleophile occurs mostly on the ion pair formed in the rate determining step. The latter reaction is apparently subject to reactivity relationships typical for a direct displacement reaction and not characteristic for free carbonium ions. These facts should be borne in mind when conclusions concerning the structure of carbonium ions are drawn from the composition and structure of solvolysis products. It is concluded that the ion pairs trapped by NaBH4 have different structures, depending upon the starting isomeric mesylate. It is shown that the formation of an equilibrating mixture of classical ions or ion pairs as intermediates in these reactions cannot account for experimental results.

Roberts,Watson

, p. 978 (1970)

Efficient and chemoselective hydrogenation of aldehydes catalyzed by well-defined PN3-pincer manganese(ii) catalyst precursors: An application in furfural conversion

Gholap, Sandeep Suryabhan,Dakhil, Abdullah Al,Chakraborty, Priyanka,Li, Huaifeng,Dutta, Indranil,Das, Pradip K.,Huang, Kuo-Wei

supporting information, p. 11815 - 11818 (2021/11/30)

Well-defined and air-stable PN3-pincer manganese(ii) complexes were synthesized and used for the hydrogenation of aldehydes into alcohols under mild conditions using MeOH as a solvent. This protocol is applicable for a wide range of aldehydes containing various functional groups. Importantly, α,β-unsaturated aldehydes, including ynals, are hydrogenated with the CC double bond/CC triple bond intact. Our methodology was demonstrated for the conversion of biomass derived feedstocks such as furfural and 5-formylfurfural to furfuryl alcohol and 5-(hydroxymethyl)furfuryl alcohol respectively.

Selective hydrogenation of primary amides and cyclic di-peptides under Ru-catalysis

Subaramanian, Murugan,Sivakumar, Ganesan,Babu, Jessin K.,Balaraman, Ekambaram

supporting information, p. 12411 - 12414 (2020/10/30)

A ruthenium(II)-catalyzed selective hydrogenation of challenging primary amides and cyclic di-peptides to their corresponding primary alcohols and amino alcohols, respectively, is reported. The hydrogenation reaction operates under mild and eco-benign conditions and can be scaled-up.

The reductive deaminative conversion of nitriles to alcohols using: Para -formaldehyde in aqueous solution

Tavakoli, Ghazal,Prechtl, Martin H. G.

, p. 6092 - 6101 (2019/11/11)

We report herein, for the first time, the application of para-formaldehyde (pFA) to the reductive deamination of both aliphatic and aromatic nitriles in aqueous solution under transfer hydrogenation conditions. A broad range of primary alcohols have been synthesized selectively with very good to excellent yields under the optimized conditions. The study disclosed that the air-stable, inexpensive and commercially available catalyst [Ru(p-cymene)Cl2]2 acts as the catalyst precursor in this reaction, converting to other more active catalytic species in the presence of pFA, resulting in its degradation to CO2 and H2. Nitriles are also showed to play a dual role in this transformation, both as a substrate and as a ligand, where the dimeric catalyst structures convert to monomeric ones upon the coordination of nitrile molecules.

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