Benzyl ethers make excellent protecting groups according to the general scheme shown here.
(a) How would you protect the 1° alcohol as a benzyl ether in the first step?

Mullins 1st Edition
Ch. 13 - Alcohols, Ethers and Related Compounds: Substitution and Elimination
Problem 117a
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Benzyl ethers make excellent protecting groups according to the general scheme shown here.
(a) How would you protect the 1° alcohol as a benzyl ether in the first step?
Suggest a mechanism for the following substitution reaction.
The acid-catalyzed dehydration we learned in this chapter is reversible, as shown below.
(b) Without looking back, how do you know this mechanism is correct?
The acid-catalyzed dehydration we learned in this chapter is reversible, as shown below.
(c) Which side of the reaction would be favored by running the reaction at low temperatures?
The acid-catalyzed dehydration we learned in this chapter is reversible, as shown below.
(d) How might you shift the equilibrium to the right?
A chemist attempted the reaction below, one we introduce in Chapter 17, expecting the reaction between a strong nucleophile and a ketone in water to give an alkoxide product.
(a) Why did the reaction fail?
(b) How could the reaction conditions be changed to give a successful reaction?