9,10-Dihydro-9,10-ethanoanthracene-11,12-trans-dicarboxylic acid diethyl ester |
Name | 9,10-Dihydro-9,10-ethanoanthracene-11,12-trans-dicarboxylic acid diethyl ester | ||
Synonyms | |||
Name in Chemical Abstracts | 9,10-Ethanoanthracene-11,12-dicarboxylic acid, diethyl ester, trans- | ||
CAS No | 93368-53-7 | ||
EINECS No | |||
Molecular formula | C22H22O4 | ||
Molecular mass | 350.42 | ||
SMILES code | c1cccc2[C@@H]3[C@H](C(=O)OCC)[C@@H](C(=O)OCC)[C@H](c12)c4ccccc43 |
1H NMR
1H-NMR: 9,10-Dihydro-9,10-ethanoanthracene-11,12-trans-dicarboxylic acid diethyl ester | |||
250 MHz, CDCl3 | |||
delta [ppm] | mult. | atoms | assignment |
1.23 | t (3J = 7.2 Hz) | 6 H | CH3 ethyl |
3.45 | m | 2 H | 11-H, 12-H (-CH-COO-) |
4.08 | m | 4 H | CH2 ethyl |
4.75 | m | 2 H | 9-H, 10-H |
13C-NMR |
13C-NMR: 9,10-Dihydro-9,10-ethanoanthracene-11,12-trans-dicarboxylic acid diethyl ester | |||
62.5 MHz, CDCl3 | |||
delta [ppm] | assignment | ||
14.2 | CH3 (ethyl ester) | ||
46.7 | C9, C10 (CH) | ||
47.7 | C11, C12 (CH-COO) | ||
60.9 | CH2 (ethyl ester) | ||
123.8 | CH arom. | ||
124.5 | CH arom. | ||
126.2 | CH arom. | ||
126.3 | CH arom. | ||
140.3 | C quart. arom. | ||
142.0 | C quart. arom. | ||
172.3 | C(=O)O- | ||
76.5-77.5 | CDCl3 |
IR
IR: 9,10-Dihydro-9,10-ethanoanthracene-11,12-trans-dicarboxylic acid diethyl ester | |||
[KBr, T%, cm-1] | |||
[cm-1] | assignment | ||
3074, 3026 | arom. C-H valence | ||
2981 | aliph. C-H valence | ||
2935, 2897 | aliph. C-H valence | ||
1739 | C=O valence, ester | ||
1467 | arom. C=C valence |
+ |
|
; Side reactions |
Synthesis of 9,10-dihydro-9,10-ethanoanthracene-11,12-trans-dicarboxylic acid diethyl ester |
Reaction type: | cycloaddition, Diels-Alder reaction |
Substance classes: | alkene, aromatics, carboxylic acid ester, diene, dienophile, acid catalyst |
Techniques: | working with moisture exclusion, heating under reflux, stirring with magnetic stir bar, filtering, evaporating with rotary evaporator, recrystallizing, use of an ice cooling bath, heating with oil bath |
Equipment |
Operating scheme |
MULTAN, PAKISTAN
Mutlan is an important city of Pakistan which is also known as the city of Saints. The history of Multan begins with the Alexander and later on Kushans, Arabs, Huns, Ghaznavi, Afghans, Mongols, Sikhs, Mughals and British ruled over the city. It is the city of Sufis and Saints who preached the Islam in this region. In the South Asia Multan is the oldest city.
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Multan Things to Do
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Baha-ud-din Zakariya Mazar
Sheikh Baha-ud-din Zakariya (1170-1267) was a sufi saint who for several years travelled the region from Baghdad, Iraq to India preaching Islam, and made his final abode in Multan. His offsprings and disciples travelled all over India to preach. His most famous descendant is Shah… more
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Shah Rukn-e-Alam’s tomb
Situated on top of a small hillock, behind the old ruins of Multan Fort, the Mazar and its majestic dome is the first landmark visible when you enter proper Multan. Shah Rukn-e-Alam (1251-1335) was a Sufi saint in Multan. He was revered by his followers, and to this date thousands of pilgrims from all over… more
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Other Saints and Sufis Mazars
Multan is known as City of Saints, and this is evident by the number of Masuleums, Mazars, Dargas, or tombs situated in this city. Some of them are listed below.1 Hazrat Baha-ud-Din Zakaria2 Shah Rukn-i-Alam3 Shah Shams Sabzwari4 Shah Gardez5 Musa Pak Shaheed6 Hazrat Hafiz Muhammad… more
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Ghanta Ghar (Clock Tower house)
Ghanta Ghar whch is situated in the city center is the city government head quarter. (not a great picture, taken from a moving car)
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Multan Fort
The Multan Fort on a high mound of earth which separated it from the old branch of the river Ravi. There are now only remnant of this old fort, which was considered as one of the best fort (defense wise) built in the sub-continent. The fort was destroyed when the British took over. During its haydays the fort walls were was almost 1.6… more
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King mosque Eid Gah
This Masjid is a marvelous piece of architecture of multan.it is a very beautiful masjid and must to visit place of Multran city
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Shrines must to visit
Given below is list of must to visit shrines in Multan1.Shrine B.B Pak Damman2.Shrine Hameed-ud-Din Hakim3.Shrine Qutab-al-quteeb’Moj Daryan’4.Shrine-Syed Pir Sakhi Shah Hasan Prwana5.Shrine-Qazi Qutab-ud-Din Kashani6.Shrine-Syed Hasan Kanjzee7.Shrine-Hazarat Shah Dana Shaheed8.Shrine-Abu… more
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Shrines of the sufi hermits
Hi Awais,All the destinations in Pakistan, they’ve their own attraction or somethijng very special in that area, likewise in Hunza, you can’t find the shrines of the sufi hermits, or in Multan, the mountains like Nanga parbat or Kalash tribes in Lahore?Multan, Medina-tul-awlia, the city of saints, famous all over the… more
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Visiting Historical Places
As I describe before that Multan is the city of Saints so there r so many Tombs to Visit and explore the history.
Multan Hotels
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