Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Acetyl azide, electrostatic potential

Electrostatic potential maps of a typical amide (acetamide) and an acyl azide (acetyl azide) are shown. Which of the two do you think is more reactive in nucleophilic acyl substitution reactions Explain. [Pg.830]

DNA sequencing and. 1113 Electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry, 417-418 Electrostatic potential map, 37 acetaldehyde, 688 acetamide, 791,922 acetate ion. 43. 53, 56, 757 acetic acid. 53. 55 acetic acid dimer, 755 acetic anhydride, 791 acetone, 55, 56. 78 acetone anion, 56 acetyl azide, 830 acetyl chloride, 791 acetylene. 262 acetylide anion, 271 acid anhydride, 791 acid chloride, 791 acyl cation, 558 adenine, 1104 alanine, 1017 alanine zwitterion, 1017 alcohol. 75 alkene, 74, 147 alkyl halide, 75 alkyne. 74... [Pg.1295]

According to the electrostatic potential maps, the carbonyl carbon of acetyl azide is more electron-poor and therefore more reactive in nucleophilic acyl substitution reactions. Resonance donation of nitrogen lone-pair electrons to the carbonyl group is greater in an amide than in an acyl azide. [Pg.551]


See other pages where Acetyl azide, electrostatic potential is mentioned: [Pg.1281]    [Pg.1281]   


SEARCH



Acetyl azide

Electrostatic potential map acetyl azide

© 2024 chempedia.info