Here is a procedure that I used:
A solution of alcohol (9) (29 kg, 137.85 mol)
in dichloromethane (470 kg) was cooled to 0 °C.
TEMPO (210 g, 1.34 mol) was added followed by a 2.75 M
aqueous solution of potassium bromide (34.9 kg) and a 1.6
M aqueous solution of potassium hydrogen carbonate (152
kg). To the rapidly stirred two-phase mixture was added a
solution of bleach (126 kg of a 11% solution, 185.5 mol)
over 90 min. The resulting mixture was stirred for a further
40 min at 0 to 5 °C. A 1.0 M aqueous solution of sodium
thiosulphate (79.9 kg) was added. The mixture was then
warmed to room temperature within 15 min, and the layers
were separated. The organic layer was washed with water
(2 × 184 kg). Sodium sulphate (7.5 kg) was added, and the
suspension was stirred for 10 min at room temperature and
filtered. The solid was rinsed with dichloromethane (2 × 22
kg), and the combined filtrate was concentrated under
vacuum at 20-25 °C to afford aldehyde 10 (28.6 kg) as an
oil, which was used immediately in the next step:
Taken from Organic Process research & Deveopment, 2003 vol. 8 (1) pp. 92-100
You might need to scale down a bit