This three volume book is the follow-up handbook to the bestselling volume ‘Metal-Catalyzed Cross-Coupling Reactions’, the definitive reference in the field. In line with the enormous developments in this area, this is not a new edition, but rather a new book in three volumes with over 50% more content. This new content includes C-H activation, shifting the focus away from typical cross-coupling reactions, while those topics and chapters found in de Meijere/Diederich’s book have been updated and expanded. With its highly experienced editor team and the list of authors reading like an international Who’s-Who in the field, this work will be of great interest to every synthetic chemist working in academia and industry.
Mục lục
VOLUME ONE
Mechanistic Aspects of Metal-Catalyzed C, C- and C, X-Bond Forming
State-of-the-Art in Metal-Catalyzed Cross-Coupling Reactions of Organoboron Compounds with Organic Electrophiles
Pd-Catalyzed Cross-Coupling with Organometals Containing Zn, Al, Zr, and so on – The Negishi Coupling and Its Recent Advances
Carbon-Carbon Bond Forming Reactions Mediated by Organozinc Reagents
Carbon-Carbon Bond Forming Reactions Mediated by Organomagnesium Reagents
Organotin Reagents in Cross-Coupling Reactions
VOLUME TWO
Organosilicon Compounds in Cross-Coupling Reactions
Cross-Coupling of Organyl Halides with Alkenes – The Heck Reaction
Cross-Coupling Reactions to sp Carbon Atoms
Carbometallation Reactions
Palladium-Catalyzed 1, 4-Additions to Conjugated Dienes
Cross-Coupling Reactions via Pi-Allylmetal Intermediates
VOLUME THREE
Palladium-Catalyzed Aromatic Carbon-Nitrogen Bond Formation
The Directed Ortho Metallation (Do M)-Cross Coupling Nexus. Synthetic Methodology for the Formation of Aryl-Aryl and Aryl-Heteroatom-Aryl Bonds
Transition-Metal-Catalyzed Hydroamination Reactions
Oxidative Functionalization of Alkenes
Biaryl Synthesis through Metal-Catalyzed C-H Arylation
C-H Bond Alkenylation
C-H Bond Alkylation (Including Hydroarylation of Alkenes)
Giới thiệu về tác giả
Armin de Meijere became Professor of Organic Chemistry at the University of Hamburg in 1977, and took up the same chair at the University of Göttingen in 1989. Since 2006 he is emeritus professor of the University of Göttingen.
Armin de Meijere has been visiting professor at universities in the USA, Israel, Italy, France, Spain, Japan, Taiwan, as well as at the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore. He was elected a member of the Norwegian Academy of Sciences and Letters in 1992, and in 1996 received the Alexander von Humboldt-Gay Lussac Prize of the French Ministry for Higher Education and Research. In 1997 he was elected member of the Braunschweigische Wissenschaftliche Gesellschaft, and as an Honorary Professor of the St. Petersburg State University, Russia. He was awarded the ‘Adolf-von-Baeyer Medal’ by the Gesellschaft Deutscher Chemiker in 2005 and received the title Doctor honoris causa by the Russian Academy of Sciences in 2009.
He is and has been editor or member of the Editorial Board for quite a number of scientific journals, periodicals and books, while his own achievements have been published in over 710 publications.
Stefan Bräse was born in Kiel, Germany, in 1967 and studied chemistry in Göttingen, Bangor (UK) and Marseille (France). In 1995, he obtained his doctorate after working with Armin de Meijere at the University of Göttingen. After post-doctoral appointments at Uppsala University, Sweden (J.-E. Bäckvall) and The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, USA (K. C. Nicolaou), he began his independent research career at the RWTH Aachen associated with Dieter Enders in 1997 and finished his habilitation in 2001. He became Professor at the University of Bonn that same year. Since 2003, he is Full Professor at the University of Karlsruhe – in October 2009 renamed to the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. Stefan Bräse has published more than 300 publications and is recipient of the ORCHEM award in 2000. His research interests include methods in drug discovery (including drug delivery), combinatorial chemistry towards the synthesis of biologically active compounds, total synthesis of natural products and nanotechnology.
Martin Oestreich (born in 1971 in Pforzheim/Germany) is currently Professor of Organic Chemistry at the Technische Universität Berlin. He received his diploma degree with Paul Knochel (Marburg, 1996) and his doctoral degree with Dieter Hoppe (Münster, 1999). After a two-year postdoctoral stint with Larry E. Overman (Irvine, 1999-2001), he completed his habilitation with Reinhard Brückner (Freiburg, 2001-2005) and was appointed as Professor of Organic Chemistry at the Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster (2006-2011). He also held visiting positions at Cardiff University in Wales (2005) and at The Australian National University in Canberra (2010).