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Electron donation

Metal to ceramic (oxide) adhesion is very important to the microelectronics industry. An electron transfer model by Burlitch and co-workers [75] shows the importance of electron donating capability in enhancing adhesion. Their calculations are able to explain the enhancement in adhesion when a NiPt layer is added to a Pt-NiO interface. [Pg.454]

Diels-Alder reactions can be divided into normal electron demand and inverse electron demand additions. This distinction is based on the way the rate of the reaction responds to the introduction of electron withdrawing and electron donating substituents. Normal electron demand Diels-Alder reactions are promoted by electron donating substituents on the diene and electron withdrawii substituents on the dienophile. In contrast, inverse electron demand reactions are accelerated by electron withdrawing substituents on the diene and electron donating ones on the dienophile. There also exists an intermediate class, the neutral Diels-Alder reaction, that is accelerated by both electron withdrawing and donating substituents. [Pg.4]

As anticipated, the complexation is characterised by negative p-values, indicating that the binding process is favoured by electron donating substituents. The order of the p-values for complexation of the different Lewis-acids again follows the Irving-Williams series. [Pg.60]

The effect of substituents on the rate of the reaction catalysed by different metal ions has also been studied Correlation with resulted in perfectly linear Hammett plots. Now the p-values for the four Lewis-acids are of comparable magnitude and do not follow the Irving-Williams order. Note tlrat the substituents have opposing effects on complexation, which is favoured by electron donating substituents, and reactivity, which is increased by electron withdrawirg substituents. The effect on the reactivity is clearly more pronounced than the effect on the complexation equilibrium. [Pg.60]

Reactions of aromatic and heteroaromatic rings are usually only found with highly reactive compounds containing strongly electron donating substituents or hetero atoms (e.g. phenols, anilines, pyrroles, indoles). Such molecules can be substituted by weak electrophiles, and the reagent of choice in nature as well as in the laboratory is usually a Mannich reagent or... [Pg.291]

The roles of phosphines are not clearly understood and are unpredictable. Therefore, in surveying optimum conditions of catalytic reactions, it is advisable to test the activity of all these important types of phosphines and phosphites. which have different steric effects and electron-donating properties. [Pg.4]

As expected, the formation of a carbonyl group is not possible with tert-allylic alcohols. Although the aromatic ring bears electron-donating groups, the 2,2-disubstituted chromene 119 was formed smoothly with the tert-allylic alcohol 118[100]. [Pg.144]

The phenylacetic acid derivative 469 is produced by the carbonylation of the aromatic aldehyde 468 having electron-donating groups[jl26]. The reaction proceeds at 110 C under 50-100 atm of CO with the catalytic system Pd-Ph3P-HCl. The reaction is explained by the successive dicarbonylation of the benzylic chlorides 470 and 471 formed in situ by the addition of HCl to aldehyde to form the malonate 472, followed by decarboxylation. As supporting evidence, mandelic acid is converted into phenylacetic acid under the same reaction conditions[327]. [Pg.192]

For ionic reactivity two cases must be considered depending on the electron demand the thiazole ring may either be electron donating or electron accepting. [Pg.71]

Electron-donating or -withdrawing properties of a substituent on the 4 and 5 positions have also been used in order to modulate the basicity in the hope to observe either hypsochromic or bathochromic shift (110). [Pg.76]

The meso carbon atom should present a carbenium structure with a low TT electron density in the ground state, in the excited state this carbon possesses the carbeniate structure (C ) with a high tt electron density (119). An electron-donating group in such a position should stabilize the ground state and rise the excited state to the highest level hypsochromic shift results as a whole. [Pg.77]

For the methyl-substituted compounds (322) the increase in AG and AHf values relative to the unsubstituted thiazole is interpreted as being mainly due to polar effects. Electron-donating methyl groups are expected to stabilize the thiazolium ion, that is to decrease its acid strength. From Table 1-51 it may be seen that there is an increase in AG and AH by about 1 kcal mole for each methyl group. Similar effects have been observed for picolines and lutidines (325). [Pg.93]

The electronic influence of the 4-substituent corresponds to a relative increase in the kinetic acidity of the C-5 proton when an electron-withdrawing group (R=Ph) is situated at the 4-position and to a relative increase in the kinetic acidity of the 2-methyl group when an electron-donating group (R = Me) is at the same position (Table 1-59). [Pg.123]

The same situation is observed in the series of alkyl-substituted derivatives. Electron-donating alkyl substituents induce an activating effect on the basicity and the nucleophilicity of the nitrogen lone pair that can be counterbalanced by a deactivating and decelerating effect resulting from the steric interaction of ortho substituents. This aspect of the reactivity of thiazole derivatives has been well investigated (198, 215, 446, 452-456) and is discussed in Chapter HI. [Pg.126]


See other pages where Electron donation is mentioned: [Pg.158]    [Pg.200]    [Pg.280]    [Pg.418]    [Pg.1946]    [Pg.2418]    [Pg.178]    [Pg.231]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.249]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.98]    [Pg.174]    [Pg.248]    [Pg.248]    [Pg.257]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.207]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.126]    [Pg.136]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.431]    [Pg.491]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.82]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.196]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.94 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.124 , Pg.125 , Pg.126 , Pg.127 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.109 ]




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1-Oxabutadiene electron-donating

Acyl with electron donating substituents

Alkene metathesis electron donation

Alkyl group electron donation

Alkyl groups directing electron-donating effects

Alkyl groups electron-donating effect

Alkyne, electron-donating effect

Amino acids with electron-donating groups

Aromatic acids electron-donating groups

Back-donation of electronic charge

Back-donation of electrons

Bonding electron back donation

Bonding electron donation

Carbon chemical shifts electron donation

Chloride electron-donating

Directing Electron-Donating Effects of Alkyl Groups

Donated/accepted electrons

Donation of bonding electrons

Donation, of electrons

Effects of Electron-Donating Groups (EDG)

Electron Donation and Positive Hole Injection

Electron back donation

Electron density donation

Electron donating groups mechanism

Electron donating groups substituent effects

Electron donating polymer

Electron donating reaction

Electron donating reactions (reduction

Electron donating site

Electron donating substituent effect

Electron donation resonance

Electron donation to

Electron donation, from alkyl groups

Electron donator

Electron pair donation

Electron pair donation Subject

Electron pair donation ring-substituted anilines

Electron pair donation solvents

Electron pair donation surfaces

Electron releasing/donating group

Electron-Pair Donation and the Lewis Acid-Base Definition

Electron-donating

Electron-donating ability

Electron-donating alkyl groups

Electron-donating and -withdrawing

Electron-donating center

Electron-donating effect (stabilization of carbocation)

Electron-donating effects

Electron-donating effects, of alkyl

Electron-donating effects, of alkyl groups

Electron-donating ester substituent

Electron-donating group

Electron-donating groups effect

Electron-donating groups increase the

Electron-donating groups inductive

Electron-donating groups pyrimidines with

Electron-donating groups radicals

Electron-donating groups reaction

Electron-donating groups substitution

Electron-donating groups, OMe

Electron-donating inductive effect

Electron-donating ligands

Electron-donating methoxy groups

Electron-donating moiety

Electron-donating property

Electron-donating reactant

Electron-donating resonance effect

Electron-donating species

Electron-donating substituent

Electron-donating substituents

Electron-donating substituents Electronic parameters

Electron-pair acceptors donation

Electrons donated, number

Electrophiles electron-donating group

Fluorescence electron donating

Fluorescence electron donating groups

Functional groups inductive electron-donating

Groups, electron-donating and

Halogens show evidence of both electron withdrawal and donation

Hydrogen bond acceptance/electron pair donation

Inductive electron donation

Ligand-to-metal electron donation

Methyl groups electron donating

Nickel electron-donating

Number of Electrons Donated to the Metal

Number of electrons donated

Oxygen Bridge Activation by an Electron-Donating Group at the Bridgehead Carbon

Part B Directing Effects of Electron Donating Groups

Phosphine ligands Electron-donating properties

Poly(p-Phenylene Vinylene) Homopolymers with Electron-Withdrawing and Donating Substituents

Regioselectivity electron-donating substituents

Resonance electron donating power

Resonance electron-donating group

Substituent effects conjugative electron donation

Substituted benzenes groups that donate electrons

Transition electron back donation

Transition electron donation

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