Esta página ha sido traducida por una máquina. Otras páginas pueden seguir apareciendo en inglés. View in English

Electrosíntesis de formato robusto a partir de polioles de biomasa mezclados mediante una ruta directa de escisión de enlaces carbono-carbono

  • 0Key Laboratory of Green Chemistry and Technology of Ministry of Education, National and Local Joint Engineering Laboratory of Energy Plant Bio-fuel Preparation and Utilization, College of Chemistry, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610064, China.

|

|

Resumen

No abstract available on PubMed

Videos de Conceptos Relacionados

Preparation of Diols and Pinacol Rearrangement 01:57

4.1K

Compounds bearing two hydroxyl groups are known as diols. When the hydroxyl groups are located on adjacent carbon atoms, the diols are called vicinal diols or glycols. Under acidic conditions, vicinal diols undergo a specific reaction called pinacol rearrangement.
The reaction begins with transferring a proton from the acid catalyst to one of the hydroxyl groups, producing an oxonium ion.

In the second step, the oxonium ion loses H2O, forming a tertiary carbocation intermediate.

In the...

Thermal and Photochemical Electrocyclic Reactions: Overview 01:26

2.9K

Electrocyclic reactions are reversible reactions. They involve an intramolecular cyclization or ring-opening of a conjugated polyene. Shown below are two examples of electrocyclic reactions. In the first reaction, the formation of the cyclic product is favored. In contrast, in the second reaction, ring-opening is favored due to the high ring strain associated with cyclobutene formation.

Electrocyclic reactions are highly stereospecific. For a substituted polyene, the stereochemical outcome...

Vicinal Diols via Reductive Coupling of Aldehydes or Ketones: Pinacol Coupling Overview 01:27

2.1K

Wilhelm Rudolph Fittig discovered the pinacol coupling reaction in 1859. It is a radical dimerization reaction and involves the reductive coupling of aldehydes or ketones in the presence of hydrocarbon solvent to yield vicinal diols.

The radical reaction is initiated by a single electron transfer from metals like sodium and magnesium to a spin-paired molecule like aldehydes or ketones to generate a ketyl—a radical anion. The ketyl has a radical character on the carbon atom and a charge on...

Preparation of Alcohols via Addition Reactions 02:15

7.2K

Overview
The acid-catalyzed addition of water to the double bond of alkenes is a large-scale industrial method used to synthesize low-molecular-weight alcohols. An acidic atmosphere is required to allow the hydrogen in the water molecule to act as an electrophile and attack the double bond in an alkene. The addition of a proton to the double bond creates a carbocation intermediate. The proton preferentially bonds to the less substituted end of the double bond to create a more stable carbocation...

C–C Bond Cleavage: Retro-Aldol Reaction 00:57

7.4K

The reverse of the aldol addition reaction is called the retro-aldol reaction. Here, the carbon–carbon bond in the aldol product is cleaved under acidic or basic conditions to form two molecules of carbonyl compounds. The mechanism of the reaction consists of three steps.
In the first step, as depicted in Figure 1, the base deprotonates the β-hydroxy ketone at the hydroxyl group to form an alkoxide ion.

Figure 1. The deprotonation of a β-hydroxy ketone to form an alkoxide ion.
Figure 2...

Olefin Metathesis Polymerization: Ring-Opening Metathesis Polymerization (ROMP) 01:16

3.1K

Ring-opening metathesis polymerization or ROMP involves strained cycloalkenes as starting materials. The mechanism of ROMP proceeds by reacting cycloalkene with Grubbs catalyst to give metallacyclobutane intermediate which undergoes a ring-opening reaction to form new carbene. The new carbene reacts with another molecule of cycloalkene. Repetition of these steps leads to the formation of an unsaturated open-chain polymer product. All these steps are reversible, however, relieving the ring...