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Produktbild: March's Advanced Organic Chemistry
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March's Advanced Organic Chemistry Reactions, Mechanisms, and Structure

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

13.04.2020

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

2144

Maße (L/B/H)

26,1/18,6/7,8 cm

Gewicht

3486 g

Auflage

8. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-119-37180-9

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

13.04.2020

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

2144

Maße (L/B/H)

26,1/18,6/7,8 cm

Gewicht

3486 g

Auflage

8. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-119-37180-9

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Wiley & Sons
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  • Produktbild: March's Advanced Organic Chemistry
  • New Reaction Sections Correlation: 7th Edition ¿ 8th Edition xv

    Preface xxi

    Common Abbreviations xxv

    Biographical Statement xxxi

    New Features of the 8th Edition xxxiii

    Part I Introduction 1

    1. Localized Chemical Bonding 3

    1.A. Covalent Bonding 3

    1.B. Multiple Valence 7

    1.C. Hybridization 7

    1.D. Multiple Bonds 9

    1.E. Photoelectron Spectroscopy 12

    1.F. Electronic Structures of Molecules 15

    1.G. Electronegativity 17

    1.H. Dipole Moment 19

    1.I. Inductive and Field Effects 20

    1.J. Bond Distances 23

    1.K. Bond Angles 27

    1.L. Bond Energies 29

    2. Delocalized Chemical Bonding 33

    2.A. Molecular Orbitals 34

    2.B. Bond Energies and Distances in Compounds Containing Delocalized Bonds 37

    2.C. Molecules that have Delocalized Bonds 39

    2.D. Cross Conjugation 44

    2.E. The Rules of Resonance 46

    2.F. The Resonance Effect 48

    2.G. Steric Inhibition of Resonance and the Influences of Strain 48

    2.H. p¿-d¿ Bonding: Ylids 52

    2.I. Aromaticity 54

    2.I.i. Six-Membered Rings 58

    2.I.ii. Five-, Seven-, and Eight-Membered Rings 62

    2.I.iii. Other Systems Containing Aromatic Sextets 67

    2.J. Alternant and Nonalternant Hydrocarbons 68

    2.K. Aromatic Systems with Electron Numbers Other Than Six 70

    2.K.i. Systems of Two Electrons 72

    2.K.ii. Systems of Four Electrons: Antiaromaticity 73

    2.K.iii. Systems of Eight Electrons 76

    2.K.iv. Systems of Ten Electrons 77

    2.K.v. Systems of More than Ten Electrons: 4n + 2 Electrons 80

    2.K.vi. Systems of More Than Ten Electrons: 4n Electrons 85

    2.L. Other Aromatic Compounds 89

    2.M. Hyperconjugation 92

    2.N. Tautomerism 96

    2.N.i. Keto-Enol Tautomerism 97

    2.N.ii. Other Proton-Shift Tautomerism 100

    3. Bonding Weaker Than Covalent 105

    3.A. Hydrogen Bonding 105

    3.B. ¿-¿ Interactions 113

    3.C. Addition Compounds 114

    3.C.i. Electron Donor-Acceptor (EDA) Complexes 114

    3.C.ii. Crown Ether Complexes and Cryptates 117

    3.C.iii. Inclusion Compounds 122

    3.C.iv. Cyclodextrins 125

    3.D. Catenanes and Rotaxanes 127

    3.E. Cucurbit[n]Uril-Based Gyroscane 131

    4. Stereochemistry and Conformation 133

    4.A. Optical Activity and Chirality 133

    4.B. Dependence of Rotation on Conditions of Measurement 135

    4.C. What Kinds of Molecules Display Optical Activity? 136

    4.D. The Fischer Projection 147

    4.E. Absolute Configuration 148

    4.E.i. The Cahn-Ingold-Prelog System 150

    4.E.ii. Methods of Determining Configuration 152

    4.F. The Cause of Optical Activity 156

    4.G. Molecules with More Than One Stereogenic Center 157

    4.H. Asymmetric Synthesis 161

    4.I. Methods of Resolution 166

    4.J. Optical Purity 173

    4.K. Cis-Trans Isomerism 175

    4.K.i. Cis-Trans Isomerism Resulting from Double Bonds 175

    4.K.ii. Cis-Trans Isomerism of Monocyclic Compounds 179

    4.K.iii. Cis-Trans Isomerism of Fused and Bridged Ring Systems 180

    4.L. Out-In Isomerism 181

    4.M. Enantiotopic and Diastereotopic Atoms, Groups, and Faces 183

    4.N. Stereospecific and Stereoselective Syntheses 186

    4.O. Conformational Analysis 187

    4.O.i. Conformation in Open-Chain Systems 188

    4.O.ii. Conformation in Six-Membered Rings 194

    4.O.iii. Conformation in Six-Membered Rings Containing Heteroatoms 199

    4.O.iv. Conformation in Other Rings 202

    4.P. Molecular Mechanics 204

    4.Q. Strain 206

    4.Q.i. Strain in Small Rings 207

    4.Q.ii. Strain in Other Rings 213

    4.Q.iii. Unsaturated Rings 215

    4.Q.iv. Strain Due to Unavoidable Crowding 218

    5. Carbocations, Carbanions, Free Radicals, Carbenes, and Nitrenes 223

    5.A. Carbocations 224

    5.A.i. Nomenclature 224

    5.A.ii. Stability and Structure of Carbocations 224

    5.A.iii. The Generation and Fate of Carbocations 234

    5.B. Carbanions 237

    5.B.i. Stability and Structure 237

    5.B.ii. The Structure of Organometallic Compounds 244

    5.B.iii. The Generation and Fate of Carbanions 249

    5.C. Free Radicals 250

    5.C.i. Stability and Structure 250

    5.C.ii. The Generation and Fate of Free Radicals 261

    5.C.iii. Radical Ions 265

    5.D. Carbenes 266

    5.D.i. Stability and Structure 266

    5.D.ii. The Generation and Fate of Carbenes 269

    5.D.iii. N-Heterocyclic Carbenes (NHCs) 274

    5.E. Nitrenes 276

    6. Mechanisms and Methods of Determining Them 279

    6.A. Types of Mechanism 279

    6.B. Types of Reaction 280

    6.C. Thermodynamic Requirements for Reaction 283

    6.D. Kinetic Requirements for Reaction 284

    6.E. The Baldwin Rules for Ring Closure 288

    6.F. Kinetic and Thermodynamic Control 290

    6.G. The Hammond Postulate 291

    6.H. Microscopic Reversibility 291

    6.I. Marcus Theory 292

    6.J. Methods of Determining Mechanisms 293

    6.J.i. Identification of Products 293

    6.J.ii. Determination of the Presence of an Intermediate 294

    6.J.iii. The Study of Catalysis 295

    6.J.iv. Isotopic Labeling 296

    6.J.v. Stereochemical Evidence 296

    6.J.vi. Kinetic Evidence 297

    6.J.vii. Isotope Effects 304

    6.K. Catalyst Development 308

    7. Irradiation Processes and Techniques that Influence Reactions in Organic Chemistry 313

    7.A. Photochemistry 314

    7.A.i. Excited States and the Ground State 314

    7.A.ii. Singlet and Triplet States: "Forbidden" Transitions 316

    7.A.iii. Types of Excitation 317

    7.A.iv. Nomenclature and Properties of Excited States 318

    7.A.v. Photolytic Cleavage 319

    7.A.vi. The Fate of the Excited Molecule: Physical Processes 320

    7.A.vii. The Fate of the Excited Molecule: Chemical Processes 325

    7.A.viii. The Determination of Photochemical Mechanisms 330

    7.B. Sonochemistry 331

    7.C. Microwave Chemistry 334

    7.D. Flow Chemistry 336

    7.E. Mechanochemistry 338

    8. Acids and Bases 339

    8.A. Brønsted Theory 339

    8.A.i. Brønsted Acids 340

    8.A.ii. Brønsted Bases 347

    8.B. The Mechanism of Proton Transfer Reactions 350

    8.C. Measurements of Solvent Acidity 352

    8.D. Acid and Base Catalysis 355

    8.E. Lewis Acids and Bases 357

    8.E.i. Hard-Soft Acids-Bases 359

    8.F. The Effects of Structure on the Strengths of Acids and Bases 361

    8.G. The Effects of the Medium on Acid and Base Strength 370

    9. Effects of Structure and Medium on Reactivity 375

    9.A. Resonance and Field Effects 375

    9.B. Steric Effects 377

    9.C. Quantitative Treatments of the Effect of Structure on Reactivity 380

    9.D. Effect of Medium on Reactivity and Rate 390

    9.E. High Pressure 390

    9.F. Water and Other Nonorganic Solvents 391

    9.G. Ionic Liquid Solvents 393

    9.H. Solventless Reactions 395

    Part II Introduction 397

    10. Aliphatic Substitution, Nucleophilic and Organometallic 403

    10.A. Mechanisms 404

    10.A.i. The SN2 Mechanism 404

    10.A.ii. The SN1 Mechanism 410

    10.A.iii. Ion Pairs in the SN1 Mechanism 414

    10.A.iv. Mixed SN1 and SN2 Mechanisms 418

    10.B. SET Mechanisms 420

    10.C. The Neighboring-Group Mechanism 422

    10.C.i. Neighboring-Group Participation by ¿ and ¿ Bonds: Nonclassical Carbocations 425

    10.D. The SNi Mechanism 440

    10.E. Nucleophilic Substitution at an Allylic Carbon: Allylic Rearrangements 441

    10.F. Nucleophilic Substitution at an Aliphatic Trigonal Carbon: The Tetrahedral Mechanism 445

    10.G. Reactivity 449

    10.G.i. The Effect of Substrate Structure 449

    10.G.ii. The Effect of the Attacking Nucleophile 457

    10.G.iii. The Effect of the Leaving Group 464

    10.G.iv. The Effect of the Reaction Medium 469

    10.G.v. Phase-Transfer Catalysis 474

    10.G.vi. Influencing Reactivity by External Means 477

    10.G.vii. Ambident (Bidentant) Nucleophiles: Regioselectivity 478

    10.G.viii. Ambident Substrates 481

    10.H. Reactions 483

    10.H.i. Oxygen Nucleophiles 483

    10.H.ii. Sulfur Nucleophiles 506

    10.H.iii. Nitrogen Nucleophiles 512

    10.H.iv. Halogen Nucleophiles 534

    10.H.v. Carbon Nucleophiles 545

    11. Aromatic Substitution, Electrophilic 607

    11.A. Mechanisms 607

    11.A.i. The Arenium Ion Mechanism 608

    11.A.ii. The SE1 Mechanism 613

    11.B. Orientation and Reactivity 614

    11.B.i. Orientation and Reactivity in Monosubstituted Benzene Rings 614

    11.B.ii. The Ortho/Para Ratio 618

    11.B.iii. Ipso Attack 620

    11.B.iv. Orientation in Benzene Rings with More Than One Substituent 621

    11.B.v. Orientation in Other Ring Systems 622

    11.C. Quantitative Treatments of Reactivity in the Substrate 624

    11.D. A Quantitative Treatment of Reactivity of the Electrophile: The Selectivity Relationship 626

    11.E. The Effect of the Leaving Group 628

    11.F. Reactions 629

    11.F.i. Hydrogen as the Leaving Group in Simple Substitution Reactions 629

    11.F.ii. Hydrogen as the Leaving Group in Rearrangement Reactions 675

    11.F.iii. Other Leaving Groups 680

    12. Aliphatic, Alkenyl, and Alkynyl Substitution: Electrophilic and Organometallic 687

    12.A. Mechanisms 687

    12.A.i. Bimolecular Mechanisms. SE2 and SEi 688

    12.A.ii. The SE1 Mechanism 691

    12.A.iii. Electrophilic Substitution Accompanied by Double-Bond Shifts 694

    12.A.iv. Other Mechanisms 695

    12.B. Reactivity 695

    12.C. Reactions 697

    12.C.i. Hydrogen as Leaving Group 697

    12.C.ii. Metals as Leaving Groups 733

    12.C.iii. Halogen as Leaving Group 746

    12.C.iv. Carbon Leaving Groups 751

    12.C.v. Electrophilic Substitution At Nitrogen 760

    13. Aromatic Substitution: Nucleophilic and Organometallic 767

    13.A. Mechanisms 768

    13.A.i. The SNAr Mechanism 768

    13.A.ii. The SN1 Mechanism 771

    13.A.iii. The Benzyne Mechanism 772

    13.A.iv. The SRN1 Mechanism 774

    13.A.v. Other Mechanisms 776

    13.B. Reactivity 776

    13.B.i. The Effect of Substrate Structure 776

    13.B.ii. The Effect of the Leaving Group 778

    13.B.iii. The Effect of the Attacking Nucleophile 779

    13.C. Reactions 779

    13.C.i. All Leaving Groups Except Hydrogen and N2+ 779

    13.C.ii. Hydrogen as Leaving Group 823

    13.C.iii. Nitrogen as Leaving Group 824

    13.C.iv. Rearrangements 834

    14. Radical Reactions 839

    14.A. Mechanisms 839

    14.A.i. Radical Mechanisms in General 839

    14.A.ii. Free-Radical Substitution Mechanisms 844

    14.A.iii. Mechanisms at an Aromatic Substrate 845

    14.A.iv. Neighboring-Group Assistance in Free-Radical Reactions 847

    14.B. Reactivity 848

    14.B.i. Reactivity for Aliphatic Substrates 848

    14.B.ii. Reactivity at a Bridgehead 853

    14.B.iii. Reactivity in Aromatic Substrates 854

    14.B.iv. Reactivity in the Attacking Radical 855

    14.B.v. The Effect of Solvent on Reactivity 856

    14.C. Reactions 856

    14.C.i. Hydrogen as Leaving Group 856

    14.C.ii. Metals as Leaving Groups 880

    14.C.iii. Halogen as Leaving Group 883

    14.C.iv. Sulfur as Leaving Group 883

    14.C.v. Carbon as Leaving Group 885

    15. Addition to Carbon-Carbon Multiple Bonds 891

    15.A. Mechanisms 892

    15.A.i. Electrophilic Addition 892

    15.A.ii. Nucleophilic Addition 895

    15.A.iii. Free-Radical Addition 896

    15.A.iv. Cyclic Mechanisms 898

    15.A.v. Addition to Conjugated Systems 898

    15.B. Orientation and Reactivity 899

    15.B.i. Reactivity 899

    15.B.ii. Orientation 902

    15.B.iii. Stereochemical Orientation 904

    15.B.iv. Addition to Cyclopropane Rings 906

    15.C. Reactions 908

    15.C.i. Isomerization of Double and Triple Bonds 908

    15.C.ii. Reactions in Which Hydrogen Adds to One Side 910

    15.C.iii. Reactions in Which Hydrogen Adds to Neither Side 992

    15.C.iv. Cycloaddition Reactions 1027

    16. Addition to Carbon-Heteroatom Multiple Bonds 1087

    16.A. Mechanism and Reactivity 1087

    16.A.i. Nucleophilic Substitution at an Aliphatic Trigonal Carbon: The Tetrahedral Mechanism 1089

    16.B. Reactions 1094

    16.B.i. Reactions in Which Hydrogen or a Metallic Ion Adds to the Heteroatom 1095

    16.B.ii. Acyl Substitution Reactions 1218

    16.B.iii. Reactions in Which Carbon Adds to the Heteroatom 1257

    16.B.iv. Addition to Isocyanides 1264

    16.B.v. Nucleophilic Substitution at a Sulfonyl Sulfur Atom 1266

    17. Elimination Reactions 1273

    17.A. Mechanisms and Orientation 1273

    17.A.i. The E2 Mechanism 1274

    17.A.ii. The E1 Mechanism 1280

    17.A.iii. The E1cB Mechanism 1281

    17.A.iv. The E1-E2-E1cB Spectrum 1286

    17.A.v. The E2C Mechanism 1287

    17.B. Regiochemistry of the Double Bond 1288

    17.C. Stereochemistry of the Double Bond 1290

    17.D. Reactivity 1291

    17.D.i. Effect of Substrate Structure 1291

    17.D.ii. Effect of the Attacking Base 1293

    17.D.iii. Effect of the Leaving Group 1294

    17.D.iv. Effect of the Medium 1294

    17.E. Mechanisms and Orientation in Pyrolytic Eliminations 1295

    17.E.i. Mechanisms 1295

    17.E.ii. Orientation in Pyrolytic Eliminations 1298

    17.E.iii. 1,4 Conjugate Eliminations 1298

    17.F. Reactions 1299

    17.F.i. Reactions in Which C C and C¿C Bonds are Formed 1299

    17.F.ii. Fragmentations 1321

    17.F.iii. Reactions in Which C¿N or C N Bonds are Formed 1325

    17.F.iv. Reactions in Which C O Bonds are Formed 1328

    17.F.v. Reactions in Which N N Bonds are Formed 1329

    17.F.vi. Extrusion Reactions 1329

    18. Rearrangements 1335

    18.A. Mechanisms 1336

    18.A.i. Nucleophilic Rearrangements 1336

    18.A.ii. The Actual Nature of the Migration 1337

    18.A.iii. Migratory Aptitudes 1340

    18.A.iv. Memory Effects 1343

    18.B. Longer Nucleophilic Rearrangements 1344

    18.C. Free-Radical Rearrangements 1345

    18.D. Carbene Rearrangements 1349

    18.E. Electrophilic Rearrangements 1349

    18.F. Reactions 1350

    18.F.i. 1,2-Rearrangements 1350

    18.F.ii. Non 1,2-Rearrangements 1389

    19. Oxidations and Reductions 1439

    19.A. Mechanisms 1440

    19.B. Reactions 1442

    19.B.i. Oxidations 1442

    19.B.ii. Reductions 1510

    Appendix A: The Literature of Organic Chemistry 1607

    Appendix B: Classification of Reactions by Type of Compounds Synthesized 1645

    Indexes

    Author Index 1669

    Subject Index 1917