I would like to remove a para-methoxybenzyl (PMB) group from a carboxylate ester. The compound of interest also has a pyridinium group, an amide, a second (free) carboxylic acid, and a BOC-protected amine. I hope to remove the PMB and the BOC groups together to make the final product in a four-step synthesis. The final product should be somewhat water-soluble, and we intend to purify by ion-exchange on Dowex-1.
I have been reading through the literature on PMB esters, and I noticed that several groups use acids such as TFA or formic acid, followed by removal of volatiles. Some methods use phenol as a solvent: Torii et al., J. Org Chem. 56, 3633 (1991), or have anisole present: Stewart, Australian J. Chem. 21, 2543 (1968). Some methods do not have a scavenger: Wakamiya et al., Bull. Soc. Chem. Japan 68(9), 2699-2703 (1995) and Stelakatos and Argyropoulos, J. Chem. Soc. C, 964 (1970). If one uses TFA or formic by itself, the reaction would seem to be a transesterification that is driven by mass action.
1. With respect to the methods that lack either anisole or phenol, I must be missing something. If one simply removes the volatiles, I cannot see why the equilibrium would not get displaced back toward reactants. In other words, the excess acid (TFA or formic) would be removed but not the PMB formate or PMB trifluoroacetate ester. I could accept that if one separated the PMB trifluoroacetate or PMB formate ester first, then one could potentially remove volatiles and isolate the desired product.
2. Should we be looking at different removal strategies altogether?