A comprehensive and up-to-date overview of alkyne chemistry, taking into account the progress made over the last two decades. The experienced editors are renowned world leaders in the field, while the list of contributors reads like a 'Who’s Who’ of synthetic organic chemistry.
The result is a valuable reference not only for organic chemists at universities and in the chemical industry, but also for biologists and material scientists involved in the modern synthesis of organic compounds and materials.
Spis treści
Introduction
PART I: CATALYTIC ISOMERIZATION OF ALKYNES
1) Redox Isomerization of Propargyl Alcohols to Enones
2) Carbophilic Cycloisomerization Reactions of Enynes and Domino Processes
3) Alkyne-Alkyne Metathesis Reactions
PART II: CATALYTIC CYCLOADDITION REACTIONS
4) Alkyne-Azide Reactions
5) Catalytic Cycloaddition Reactions
PART III: CATALYTIC NUCLEOPHILIC ADDITIONS AND SUBSTITUTIONS
6) Catalytic Conjugate Additions of Alkynes
7) Catalytic Alkyne-Carbonyl Additions
8) Catalytic Nucleophilic Addition of Alkynes to Imines: The A3 (Aldehyde-Alkyne-Amine) Coupling
9) Sonogashira Reactions
PART IV: OTHER REACTIONS
10) Catalytic Dimerization of Alkynes
11) The Oxidative Dimerization of Acetylenes and Related Reactions: Synthesis and Applications of Conjugated 1, 3-Diynes
12) The Alkyne Zipper Reaction in Asymmetric Synthesis
O autorze
Professor Barry M. Trost obtained a Ph.D. at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Cambridge, USA) and directly moved to the University of Wisconsin (USA) where he was promoted to Professor of Chemistry in 1969 and subsequently became the Vilas Research Professor in 1982. He joined the faculty at Stanford (USA) as Professor of Chemistry in 1987 and became Tamaki Professor of Humanities and Sciences in 1990. Professor Trost has received a number of awards, including the ACS Award in Pure Chemistry (1977), the ACS Award for Creative Work in Synthetic Organic Chemistry (1981), the Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung Award (1984), Arthur C. Cope Scholar Award (1989), the Belgian Organic Synthesis Symposium Elsevier Award (2000), the Nichols Medal (2000), the Yamada Prize (2001), the ACS Cope Award (2004), and the Nagoya Medal (2008). Professor Trost has been elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Sciences (1982) and a member of the National Academy of Sciences (1980). He has served as editor and on the editorial board of many books and journals, including being Associate Editor of the 'Journal of the American Chemical Society’ (1974-80). He has held over 125 special university lectureships and presented over 270 plenary lectures at national and international meetings. He has published two books and over 900 scientific articles. He edited the compendium 'Comprehensive Organic Synthesis’ consisting of nine volumes and serves on the editorial board for the reference databases 'Science of Synthesis’ (Thieme) and 'Reaxys’ (Elsevier).
Professor Chao-Jun Li received his Ph.D at Mc Gill University (Montreal, Canada) and did a NSERC Postdoctoral Fellow at Stanford University (USA). He was on the faculty at Tulane University (New Orleans, USA) until 2003. Since 2003, he has been at Mc Gill University where he currently holds a Canada Research Chair (in Green Chemistry) and an E. B. Eddy Chair Professorship. He has published over 300 scientific publications and received numerous awards including the US Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Award and the Canadian Green Chemistry and Engineering Award. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada (Academy of Science) and is an Associate Editor for 'Green Chemistry’ of the Royal Society of Chemistry (UK).