Comprehensive Organic Functional Group Transformations II: A Comprehensive Review of the Synthetic Literature 1995 - 2003

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Elsevier, 16.12.2004 - 6400 Seiten
Comprehensive Organic Functional Group Transformations II (COFGT-II) will provide the first point of entry to the literature for all scientists interested in chemical transformations. Presenting the vast subject of organic synthesis in terms of the introduction and interconversion of all known functional groups, COFGT-II provides a unique information source documenting all methods of efficiently performing a particular transformation. Organised by the functional group formed, COFGT-II consists of 144 specialist reviews, written by leading scientists who evaluate and summarise the methods available for each functional group transformation.

Also available online via ScienceDirect – featuring extensive browsing, searching, and internal cross-referencing between articles in the work, plus dynamic linking to journal articles and abstract databases, making navigation flexible and easy. For more information, pricing options and availability visit www.info.sciencedirect.com.
  • By systematically treating each functional group in turn the work also identifies what is not known, thus pointing the way to new research areas
  • Follows the systematic layout of the successful 1995 COFGT reference work, based on the arrangement and bonding of hetero-atoms around a central carbon atom
  • The work will save researchers valuable time in their research as each chapter is written by experts who have critically read and reviewed the literature and presented the best methods of forming every known functional group
 

Ausgewählte Seiten

Inhalt

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Electrophiles and Nucleophiles to CC Multiple Bonds
1
Introduction to Volume
3
Si or Ge or a Metal
4
Introduction to Volume
5
References
6
Synthesis Carbon With No Attached Heteroatoms
2
Tetracoordinate Products
365
Functional Groups
161
Dicoordinated Carbon Functions
161
C
15
References
207
Synthesis Carbon With Two Heteroatoms Each
17
Chalcogen
18
Bismuth and No Halogen Chalcogen or Nitrogen
41
SIR33 C
658

Tricoordinated Carbon with No Attached
542
C
1131
References
1211
References
169
DerivativesSelenenates Seleninates Selenonates And Related Functions
194
References
205
Corresponding Tellurium Compounds
214
Heteroatom Attached to the spCarbon Atom
5
Functions Linked by a Single Bond to an
159
Metal
4
CNR1 2
112
R1R2CX R1R2C+X R1R2CX
161
Functions Linked by a Single Bond to an
161
References
1
R1CTeOR2
48
References
368
R1CNR2PR32
1994
Synthesis Carbon With Three or Four Attached
289
Chalcogen or Group 15 Elements Also the Synthesis of Functions Containing
290
Tetracoordinated Carbon with Four Attached
1024
Metals
1118
Than a Halogen or Chalcogen
943
Halogen or Chalcogen
1006
Also at Least One Chalcogen and No Halogen
603
Function And No Halogen Chalcogen Or Nitrogen Functions
723

Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen

Autoren-Profil (2004)

Alan Katritzky was educated at Oxford and has held faculty positions at Cambridge and East Anglia before he migrated in 1980 to the University of Florida, where he was Kenan Professor and Director for the Institute for Heterocyclic Compounds. During his career he has trained more than 1000 graduate students and post-docs, and lectured and consulted world-wide. He led the team, which produced “Comprehensive Heterocyclic Chemistry and its sequels, "CHEC-II" and "CHEC-III, has edited “Advances in Heterocyclic Chemistry, Vols. 1 through 111 and conceived the plan for “Comprehensive Organic Functional Group Transformations. He founded Arkat-USA, a non-profit organization which publishes “Archive for Organic Chemistry (ARKIVOC) an electronic journal completely free to authors and readers at (www.arkat-usa.org). Honors include 14 honorary doctorates from 11 countries and membership of foreign membership of the National Academies of Britain, Catalonia, India, Poland, Russia and Slovenia.

Richard Taylor is currently Professor of Organic Chemistry at the University of York, where his research focuses on the development of novel synthetic methodology and the synthesis of natural products and related compounds of biological/medicinal interest. The methodology is concentrated primarily on organometallic, organosulfur and oxidation processes and the targets include, amino acids, carbohydrates, prostaglandins, and polyene and polyoxygenated natural products, particularly with activity as antibiotics and anti-cancer agents. Richard Taylor is a graduate and postgraduate of the University of Sheffield, and he then carried out postdoctoral research at Syntex, California (Dr. I. T. Harrison) and University College London (Professor F. Sondheimer). His first academic appointment was at the Open University in Milton Keynes. This post gave Professor Taylor the opportunity to contribute to Open University textbooks, radio programmes and television productions on various aspects of organic chemistry. Professor Taylor then moved to UEA, Norwich where he established his independent research programme,before taking up his present position in York in 1993. Richard Taylor is the current President of the Organic Division of the Royal Society of Chemistry and was awarded the 1999 RSC Tilden Lectureship and the 1999 RSC Heterocyclic Prize. He is currently the UK Regional Editor of the international journal Tetrahedron.

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