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Carboxy carboxylic acid

Carboxy includes carboxy (carboxylic acids), alkoxycarbonyl (esters), carbamoyl (amides), thiocarbamoyl, hydrazinocarbamoyl (hydrazides), guanidinocarbonyl, azidocarbonyl (azides), chlorocarbonyl (acid chlorides), amidino, C-hydrazino-C-iminomethyl, C-alkoxy-C-iminomethyl (imino ethers), C-alkylthio-C-iminomethyl (iminothioethers), cyano (nitriles), C-formyl(aldehydes), dialkoxymethyl (acetals of aldehydes), C-acyl (ketones), isocyanato, and thiocyanato groups. [Pg.383]

Carboxylic acids -COOH Carboxy... -carboxylic acid ... [Pg.79]

Amides are sometimes prepared directly from carboxylic acids and amines by a two step process The first step is an acid-base reaction m which the acid and the amine combine to form an ammonium carboxylate salt On heating the ammonium carboxy late salt loses water to form an amide... [Pg.860]

If it were a carboxylic acid, the carboxy proton would not be visible because of deuterium exchange in the solvent tetradeuteriomethanol ... [Pg.240]

The effect of a carboxy group is illustrated by the reactivity of 2-bromopyridine-3- and 6-carboxylic acids (resonance and inductive activation, respectively) (cf. 166) to aqueous acid under conditions which do not give hydroxy-debromination of 2-bromopyridine and also by the hydroxy-dechlorination of 3-chloropyridine-4-car-boxylic acid. The intervention of intermolecular bifunctional autocatalysis by the carboxy group (cf. 237) is quite possible. In the amino-dechlorination (80°, 4 hr, petroleum ether) of 5-carbethoxy-4-chloropyrimidine there is opportunity for built-in solvation (167) in addition to electronic activation. This effect of the carboxylate ion, ester, and acid and its variation with charge on the nucleophile are discussed in Sections I,D,2,a, I,D,2,b, and II,B, 1. A 5-amidino group activates 2-methylsulfonylpyridine toward methanolic am-... [Pg.228]

Chemical Name 7-( (Carboxy(4-hydroxyphenyl)acetyll amino] 7-methoxy-3-[ [ (1-methyl-1 H-tetrazol-5-yl)thio] -methyl] -8-oxo-5-oxa-1 -azabicycio [4.2.0] oct-2-ene-2-carboxylic acid disodium salt... [Pg.1039]

Carboxylic adds -oit acid -carboxylic acid carboxy... [Pg.1227]

The present synthesis10 consists of two simple steps, uses readily available and inexpensive starting materials, and produces pure material in high overall yield. It is based on two observations that nonenolizable ketones may be cleaved to carboxylic acids by potassium ferf-butoxide-water,2 and that aryl 2 chlorophenyl ketones may be cleaved with loss of the 2-chlorophenyl group to give only one of the two possible acids.11 Other compounds prepared by this route include carboxycyclopentadienyltriearbonylmanganese [Manganese, tricar-bonyl[(l, 2,3,4,5- )-l-carboxy-2,4-cyclopentadien-l-yl]-] (79%)10 and... [Pg.30]

Cyclopropane, 1,1 -dibromo-2,2-diplienyl-[Benzene, l,l -(2,2-dibromocyclo-propylidene)bis-], 32 Cyclopropanecarboxyltc acid, 70 Cydopropanes, gem-dihalo, 32 CYCLOUNDECANONE, 107 Cycloundecanone, 2-hydroxy-, 110 Cycloundecene, 1-carboxy- [1-Cyclo-undecene-1-carboxylic acid], 111 Cycloundecene, 1-methoxy-, 111 1-Cycloundecene-l-carboxyhc acid, methyl ester, 108... [Pg.140]

Another class of hydrocarbon binders used in propints are the carboxy-terminated polybutadiene polymers which are cross-linked with either tris[l-(2-methyl)aziridinyl] phosphine oxide (MAPO) or combinations with phenyl bis [l -(2-methyl)aziridinyl] phosphine oxide (Phenyl MAPO). Phenyl MAPO is a difunctional counterpart of MAPO which makes possible chain extension of polymers with two carboxylic acid groups. A typical propint formulation with ballistic properties is in Table 11 (Ref 83) Another class of composites includes those using hydroxy-terminated polybutadienes cross-linked with toluene diisocyanate as binders. The following simplified equations illustrate typical reactions involved in binder formation... [Pg.889]

The ionization of (E)-diazo methyl ethers is catalyzed by the general acid mechanism, as shown by Broxton and Stray (1980, 1982) using acetic acid and six other aliphatic and aromatic carboxylic acids. The observation of general acid catalysis is evidence that proton transfer occurs in the rate-determining part of the reaction (Scheme 6-5). The Bronsted a value is 0.32, which indicates that in the transition state the proton is still closer to the carboxylic acid than to the oxygen atom of the methanol to be formed. If the benzene ring of the diazo ether (Ar in Scheme 6-5) contains a carboxy group in the 2-position, intramolecular acid catalysis is observed (Broxton and McLeish, 1983). [Pg.113]

However, it may be that the acid catalysis mechanism is more complex than that described by Scheme 6-5. Broxton and McLeish (1983) investigated the (ii)-diazo ether of a benzene derivative with a carboxy group in the 2-position. They also observed acid catalysis by added carboxylic acids, but, interestingly enough, the reactivity decreased as the strength of the added acid increased. [Pg.113]

Phenolic compounds are weaker nucleophiles and better leaving groups than aliphatic alcohols. They do not yield polyesters when reacted with carboxylic acids or alkyl carboxy lates. The synthesis of polyesters from diphenols is, therefore, generally carried out through the high-temperature carboxylic acid-aryl acetate or phenyl ester-phenol interchange reactions with efficient removal of reaction by-product (Schemes 2.10 and 2.11, respectively). [Pg.62]

Carboxy-hydroxy reactions, 63 Carboxyl endgroup chemical titration, 94 Carboxylic acid-aryl acetate interchange reactions, 62, 63... [Pg.579]

Quinoxalinedicarboxylic anhydride (47) and 2-amino-4,5,6,7-tetrahydroben-zo[Z ]thiophene-2-carboxylic acid (48) gave 3-[iV-(3-carboxy-4,5,6,7-tetrahy-drobenzo[/7]thien-2-yl)carbamoyl]-2-quinoxalinecarboxylic acid (49) (EtOH, reflux, 30 min 80% analogs likewise). [Pg.325]


See other pages where Carboxy carboxylic acid is mentioned: [Pg.18]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.231]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.224]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.231]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.224]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.277]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.241]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.70]    [Pg.217]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.330]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.64]    [Pg.172]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.50 ]




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Carboxy/carboxylic acid groups

Carboxylic acids Carboxy . . ., Carboxylates)

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