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Hydrogen electronic properties

Isotope spectra. Deuterium (D) is an isotope of hydrogen (H) with a mass about twice that of hydrogen electronic properties of H2 and D2,... [Pg.89]

The hydrogen abstraction from the Si-H moiety of silanes is fundamentally important for these reactions. Kinetic studies have been performed with many types of silicon hydrides and with a large variety of radicals and been reviewed periodically. The data can be interpreted in terms of the electronic properties of the silanes imparted by substituents for each attacking radical. In brevity, we compared in Figure 1 the rate constants of hydrogen abstraction from a variety of reducing systems by primary alkyl radicals at ca. 80°C. ... [Pg.124]

As mentioned in Sect. 2.2, phosphine oxides are air-stable compounds, making their use in the field of asymmetric catalysis convenient. Moreover, they present electronic properties very different from the corresponding free phosphines and thus may be employed in different types of enantioselective reactions, m-Chloroperbenzoic acid (m-CPBA) has been showed to be a powerful reagent for the stereospecific oxidation of enantiomerically pure P-chirogenic phos-phine-boranes [98], affording R,R)-97 from Ad-BisP 6 (Scheme 18) [99]. The synthesis of R,R)-98 and (S,S)-99, which possess a f-Bu substituent, differs from the precedent in that deboranation precedes oxidation with hydrogen peroxide to yield the corresponding enantiomerically pure diphosphine oxides (Scheme 18) [99]. [Pg.25]

As with carbocation-initiated polyene cyclizations, radical cyclizations can proceed through several successive steps if the steric and electronic properties of the reactant provide potential reaction sites. Cyclization may be followed by a second intramolecular step or by an intermolecular addition or alkylation. Intermediate radicals can be constructed so that hydrogen atom transfer can occur as part of the overall process. For example, 2-bromohexenes having radical stabilizing substituents at C(6) can undergo cyclization after a hydrogen atom transfer step.348... [Pg.980]

Supported Co, Ni, Ru, Rh, Pd and Pt as well as Raney Ni and Co catalysts were used for the hydrogenation of dodecanenitrile to amines in stirred SS autoclaves both in cyclohexane and without a solvent. The reaction temperature and the hydrogen pressure were varied between 90-140 °C and 10-80 bar, respectively. Over Ni catalysts NH3 and/or a base modifier suppressed the formation of secondary amine. High selectivity (93-98 %) to primary amine was obtained on Raney nickel, Ni/Al203 and Ru/A1203 catalysts at complete nitrile conversion. With respect to the effect of metal supported on alumina the selectivity of dodecylamine decreased in the order Co Ni Ru>Rh>Pd>Pt. The difference between Group VIII metals in selectivity can be explained by the electronic properties of d-band of metals. High selectivity to primary amine was achieved on base modified Raney Ni even in the absence of NH3. [Pg.45]

The selectivity of RNH2 on M/A1203 and Raney catalysts decreased in the order Co Ni Ru>Rh>Pd>Pt. This order corresponds to the opposite sequence of reducibility of metal-oxides [8] and standard reduction potentials of metalions [9], The difference between Group VIII metals in selectivity to amines can probably been explained by the difference in the electronic properties of d-bands of metals [3], It is interacting to note that the formation of secondary amine, i.e. the nucleophilic addition of primary amine on the intermediate imine can also take place on the Group VIII metal itself. Therefore, the properties of the metal d-band could affect the reactivity of the imine and its interaction with the amine. One could expect that an electron enrichment of the metal d-band will decrease the electron donation from the unsaturated -C=NH system, and the nucleophilic attack at the C atom by the amine [3], Correlation between selectivity of metals in nitrile hydrogenation and their electronic properties will be published elsewhere. [Pg.49]

However, there are still important reactivity features which have so far been neglected by the reactivity functions, but yet which must be accounted for even at this stage of development if a sensible overall approach is to result. An important case concerns the special position of the hydrogen atom, and its ion, the proton. Its peculiar role in chemistry is reflected particularly in the way that even weakly basic solvents are able to interact with, and stabilize, it to a degree sufficient to render it a common and feasible independent entity in chemical reactions. This is in marked contrast to simple alkyl group ions, such as the methyl cation, whose electronic properties in many respects are very similar to those of the proton. Our current level of model development does not reflect this difference, and so specific allowance must be made artificially for the proton. [Pg.62]

The effect of microwave irradiation on the catalytic properties of a silver catalyst (Ag/Al203) in ethane epoxidation was studied by Klimov et al. [91]. It was found that on catalyst previously reduced with hydrogen the rates of both epoxidation and carbon dioxide formation increased considerably on exposure to a microwave field. This effect gradually decreased or even disappeared as the catalyst attained the steady state. It was suggested that this was very likely because of modification of electronic properties of the catalyst exposed to microwave irradiation. [Pg.362]

Most of the other metal-related deep levels in Si are also passivated by reaction with hydrogen (Pearton, 1985). Silver, for example, gives rise in general to a donor level at Ee + 0.54 eV and an acceptor level at Ec - 0.54 e V (Chen and Milnes, 1980 Milnes, 1973). These levels are very similar to those shown by Au, Co and Rh and raise the question of whether Au might actually be introduced into all of the reported samples or a contaminant, or whether as discussed by several authors there is a similar core to these impurity centers giving rise to similar electronic properties (Mesli et al., 1987 Lang et al., 1980). This problem has not been adequately decided at this time. It has been... [Pg.84]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.244 , Pg.245 , Pg.246 , Pg.247 ]




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Hydrogen electrons

Hydrogen properties

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