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Hydrogenation, halides

Gattermann s reaction A variation of the Sandmeyer reaction copper powder and hydrogen halide are allowed to react with the diazonium salt solution and halogen is introduced into the aromatic nucleus in place of an amino group. [Pg.187]

MarkownikofT s rule The rule states that in the addition of hydrogen halides to an ethyl-enic double bond, the halogen attaches itself to the carbon atom united to the smaller number of hydrogen atoms. The rule may generally be relied on to predict the major product of such an addition and may be easily understood by considering the relative stabilities of the alternative carbenium ions produced by protonation of the alkene in some cases some of the alternative compound is formed. The rule usually breaks down for hydrogen bromide addition reactions if traces of peroxides are present (anti-MarkownikofT addition). [Pg.251]

Stephenson J C, Finzi J and Moore C B 1972 Vibration-vibration energy transfer in C02-hydrogen halide mixtures J. Chem. Phys. 56 5214-21... [Pg.3015]

The unequal distribution of charge produced when elements of different electronegativities combine causes a polarity of the covalent bond joining them and, unless this polarity is balanced by an equal and opposite polarity, the molecule will be a dipole and have a dipole moment (for example, a hydrogen halide). Carbon tetrachloride is one of a relatively few examples in which a strong polarity does not result in a molecular dipole. It has a tetrahedral configuration... [Pg.51]

For the formation of the hydrogen halides by the direct combination of the elements, the enthalpies of formation are ... [Pg.72]

The heats of formation of the gaseous atoms, 4, are not very different clearly, it is the change in the bond dissociation energy of HX, which falls steadily from HF to HI, which is mainly res ponsible for the changes in the heats of formation. 6. We shall see later that it is the very high H—F bond energy and thus the less easy dissoeiation of H—F into ions in water which makes HF in water a weak aeid in comparison to other hydrogen halides. [Pg.73]

Towards a simple Lewis base, for example the proton, phosphine is a poorer electron donor than ammonia, the larger phosphorus atom being less able to form a stable covalent bond with the acceptor atom or molecule. Phosphine is, therefore, a much weaker base than ammonia and there is no series of phosphonium salts corresponding to the ammonium salts but phosphonium halides. PH4X (X = Cl, Br, I) can be prepared by the direct combination of phosphine with the appropriate hydrogen halide. These compounds are much more easily dissociated than ammonium halides, the most stable being the iodide, but even this dissociates at 333 K PH4I = PH3 -t- HI... [Pg.226]

Numerous ionic compounds with halogens are known but a noble gas configuration can also be achieved by the formation of a covalent bond, for example in halogen molecules, X2, and hydrogen halides, HX. When the fluorine atom acquires one additional electron the second quantum level is completed, and further gain of electrons is not energetically possible under normal circumstances, i.e... [Pg.312]

The dipole moments of the hydrogen halides decrease with increasing atomic number of the hydrogen, the largest difference occurring between HF and HCl, and association of molecules is not an important factor in the properties of FICl, HBr and HI. This change in dipole moment is reflected in the diminishing permittivity (dielectric constant) values from HF to HI. [Pg.327]

All the hydrogen halides are freely soluble in water and react according to the general equation... [Pg.328]

Hydrogen fluoride also effects replacement reactions in organic compounds. For example, carbon tetrachloride yields a mixture of chlorofluoromethanes CCI3F, CCI2F2 and so on. Like all the other hydrogen halides, hydrogen fluoride adds on to olefins, for example ... [Pg.330]

Anhydrous halides, however, are obtained when the metal is heated with the dry hydrogen halide or the halogen. In the case of elements with more than one oxidation state, the hydrogen halide produces a lower halide and the halogen a higher halide, for example... [Pg.343]

A halogen atom directly attached to a benzene ring is usually unreactive, unless it is activated by the nature and position of certain other substituent groups. It has been show n by Ullmann, however, that halogen atoms normally of low reactivity will condense with aromatic amines in the presence of an alkali carbonate (to absorb the hydrogen halide formed) and a trace of copper powder or oxide to act as a catalyst. This reaction, known as the Ullmant Condensation, is frequently used to prepare substituted diphenylamines it is exemplified... [Pg.217]

As well as the cr-complexes discussed above, aromatic molecules combine with such compounds as quinones, polynitro-aromatics and tetra-cyanoethylene to give more loosely bound structures called charge-transfer complexes. Closely related to these, but usually known as Tt-complexes, are the associations formed by aromatic compounds and halogens, hydrogen halides, silver ions and other electrophiles. [Pg.117]

The majority of preparative methods which have been used for obtaining cyclopropane derivatives involve carbene addition to an olefmic bond, if acetylenes are used in the reaction, cyclopropenes are obtained. Heteroatom-substituted or vinyl cydopropanes come from alkenyl bromides or enol acetates (A. de Meijere, 1979 E. J. Corey, 1975 B E. Wenkert, 1970 A). The carbenes needed for cyclopropane syntheses can be obtained in situ by a-elimination of hydrogen halides with strong bases (R. Kdstcr, 1971 E.J. Corey, 1975 B), by copper catalyzed decomposition of diazo compounds (E. Wenkert, 1970 A S.D. Burke, 1979 N.J. Turro, 1966), or by reductive elimination of iodine from gem-diiodides (J. Nishimura, 1969 D. Wen-disch, 1971 J.M. Denis, 1972 H.E. Simmons, 1973 C. Girard, 1974),... [Pg.74]

The carbonylation of some alkyl halides such as iodocyclohexane (911) can be carried out under neutral conditions in the presence of N,N,N.N-tetre,-methylurea (TMU), which is a neutral compound, but catches generated hydrogen halide. Molecular sieves (MS-4A) are used for the same pur-pose[768]. Very reactive ethyl 3-iodobutyrate (912) is carbonylated to give ethyl methylsuccinate (913) in the presence of TMU. The expected elimination of HI to form crotonate, followed by carbonylation, does not occur. [Pg.262]

Table 1 3 lists the dipole moments of various bond types For H—F H—Cl H—Br and H—I these bond dipoles are really molecular dipole moments A polar molecule has a dipole moment a nonpolar one does not Thus all of the hydrogen halides are polar molecules To be polar a molecule must have polar bonds but can t have a shape that causes all the individual bond dipoles to cancel We will have more to say about this m Section 1 11 after we have developed a feeling for the three dimensional shapes of molecules... [Pg.17]

Bond Strength The effect of bond strength is easy to see by comparing the acidities of the hydrogen halides... [Pg.38]

The major portion of the present chapter concerns the conversion of alcohols to alkyl halides by reaction with hydrogen halides... [Pg.142]

Preparation of Alkyl Halides from Alcohols and Hydrogen Halides... [Pg.151]

PREPARATION OF ALKYL HALIDES FROM ALCOHOLS AND HYDROGEN HALIDES... [Pg.151]


See other pages where Hydrogenation, halides is mentioned: [Pg.22]    [Pg.57]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.307]    [Pg.201]    [Pg.2439]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.115]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.327]    [Pg.327]    [Pg.327]    [Pg.328]    [Pg.328]    [Pg.328]    [Pg.329]    [Pg.732]    [Pg.472]    [Pg.284]    [Pg.413]    [Pg.512]    [Pg.115]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.40]    [Pg.142]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.52 ]




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1- Butanol reaction with hydrogen halides

1.3- dienes addition of hydrogen halides

2- Methyl-2-butene reaction with hydrogen halides

Acetylene and Substituted Acetylenes in Presence of Carboxylic Acids, Hydrogen Halides, Mercaptans or Amines

Acid dissociation constants hydrogen halides

Acidity continued hydrogen halides

Acidity of hydrogen halides

Action of Dry Hydrogen Halides

Active hydrogen compounds reaction with aryl halides

Acyl halides with active hydrogen

Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes

Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkynes

Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Conjugated Dienes

Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Nitriles and Isonitriles

Addition of Hydrogen Halides to the Pyrrole Ring

Addition of a Hydrogen Halide to an Alkene

Addition of hydrogen halide to simple unsaturated hydrocarbons

Addition of hydrogen halide to unsaturated alcohols, ethers, carbonyl compounds, and nitriles

Addition of hydrogen halides

Addition of hydrogen halides (HX)

Addition of hydrogen halides or halogens to alkenes

Addition polymers hydrogen halides

Addition reactions hydrogen halides

Addition reactions, of hydrogen halides

Alcohols with hydrogen halides

Alkenes addition of hydrogen halides

Alkenes addition reactions with hydrogen halides

Alkenes continued) hydrogen halides

Alkenes hydrogen halides

Alkenes of hydrogen halides

Alkenes with hydrogen halides

Alkenes with hydrogen halides, free-radical

Alkenes with hydrogen halides, polar

Alkyl groups alcohol reactions with hydrogen halides

Alkyl halides alcohol reactions with hydrogen

Alkyloxonium ions hydrogen halides

Alkynes addition of hydrogen halides

Alkynes hydrogen halide addition

Alkynes with Hydrogen Halides

Aluminum, elemental hydrogen halides

Amine-Hydrogen Halide

Antimony hydrogen halides

Antimony, elemental hydrogen halides

Antimony—hydrogen bonds arsenic halides

Arsenic hydrogen halides

Arsenic, elemental hydrogen halides

Arsenic—carbon bonds hydrogen halides

Arsenic—nitrogen bonds hydrogen halides

Aryl ethers cleavage by hydrogen halides

Aryl halides with active hydrogen

Atom-molecule reactions studied in flow systems the hydrogen halide system

Bismuth compounds hydrogen halides

Bismuth hydrogen halides

Bismuth—carbon bonds hydrogen halides

Bond dissociation energy hydrogen halides

Bond strength hydrogen halides

Boron, vapor hydrogen halides

Carbene complexes with hydrogen halides

Carbides hydrogen halides

Carbocation Rearrangements in Hydrogen Halide Addition to Alkenes

Carbocations addition of hydrogen halides

Carbocations addition of hydrogen halides to conjugated

Carbocations with hydrogen halides

Carbon hydrogen halides

Carbon—lead bonds hydrogen halides

Carbon—phosphorus bonds hydrogen halides

Carbon—silicon bonds hydrogen halides

Charge transfer hydrogen halides

Cleavage of Aryl Ethers by Hydrogen Halides

Cleavage of Ethers by Hydrogen Halides

Comparison of molecular oxygen and hydrogen halide excitation

Complex hydrides hydrogen halides

Complex hydrogen halides

Condensation hydrogen halides

Cycloalkenes addition of hydrogen halides

Cyclohexenes stereochemistry of hydrogen halide addition

Dienes with hydrogen halides

Dipole hydrogen halides

Electrophilic Addition of a Hydrogen Halide to an Alkene

Electrophilic addition hydrogen halides

Electrophilic addition of hydrogen halides to alkenes

Electrophilic addition reactions, alkynes hydrogen halides

Elimination of hydrogen halide from organic

Elimination of hydrogen halide from organic halides

Elimination of hydrogen halides

Enthalpy change for dissociation of hydrogen halides

Entropy change for dissociation of hydrogen halides

Entropy hydrogen halides

Ethers cleavage by hydrogen halides

Excited Hydrogen Halides

For hydrogen halides

Free energy hydrogen halide

Free radicals hydrogen halides

From hydrogen halides

Germanium hydrogen halides

Group 13 sulfides hydrogen halides

Group 17 elements hydrogen halides

Group hydrogen halides

Halides and Halogen Atoms as Hydrogen-Bond Acceptors

Halides elemental hydrogen

Halides, Hydrogen Cyanide, and Cyanogen

Halides, alkyl hydrogenation

Halides, alkyl reaction with hydrogen sulfide

Halogen atoms direct reactions with hydrogen halides

Halogens (Group hydrogen halides

Halogens and Hydrogen Halides

Halogens hydrogen halides

Hydrogen Halide Elimination Reactions

Hydrogen Plasma Reduction of Metals and Other Elements from Their Halides

Hydrogen fluoride with acyl halides

Hydrogen halide acceptor

Hydrogen halide acids

Hydrogen halide addition Markovnikov’s rule

Hydrogen halide decomposition

Hydrogen halide salts

Hydrogen halide solids

Hydrogen halide, combustion

Hydrogen halide, combustion analysis

Hydrogen halides

Hydrogen halides

Hydrogen halides acid strength

Hydrogen halides acidity

Hydrogen halides addition

Hydrogen halides addition to alkenes

Hydrogen halides addition to alkynes

Hydrogen halides alcohols

Hydrogen halides alkynes

Hydrogen halides aqueous solution

Hydrogen halides charge separation

Hydrogen halides chemical reactivity

Hydrogen halides conjugated dienes

Hydrogen halides dienes

Hydrogen halides dipole moments

Hydrogen halides dissociation

Hydrogen halides dissolution

Hydrogen halides electrolytic reduction

Hydrogen halides electrophilic addition, alkynes

Hydrogen halides elimination

Hydrogen halides epoxides

Hydrogen halides ethers

Hydrogen halides fluoride

Hydrogen halides from Friedel-Crafts reactions

Hydrogen halides industrial synthesis

Hydrogen halides iodide

Hydrogen halides metal hydrides

Hydrogen halides moments

Hydrogen halides nitriles

Hydrogen halides nonaqueous solvent properties

Hydrogen halides nonmetal hydrides

Hydrogen halides physical properties

Hydrogen halides polarity

Hydrogen halides preparation

Hydrogen halides production

Hydrogen halides reacting with

Hydrogen halides reaction with alcohols

Hydrogen halides reaction with, phosgene

Hydrogen halides reactions

Hydrogen halides reactions with alkenes

Hydrogen halides reactions with ethers

Hydrogen halides reactivity

Hydrogen halides safety

Hydrogen halides selenium oxide

Hydrogen halides synthesis

Hydrogen halides to alkenes

Hydrogen halides to alkenylbenzenes

Hydrogen halides to alkynes

Hydrogen halides to conjugated dienes

Hydrogen halides transition-metal hydrides

Hydrogen halides water

Hydrogen halides with epoxides

Hydrogen halides with ethers

Hydrogen halides, HX

Hydrogen halides, addition fluoroalkenes

Hydrogen halides, electron scavenging

Hydrogen halides, molecular elimination

Hydrogen halides, purification

Hydrogen halides, reaction with epoxide

Hydrogen iodide sulfur halides

Hydrogen, elemental boron halides

Hydrogen-silver halide cell

Hydrogenation acyl halides

Hydrogenation allyl halides

Hydrogenation copper halides

Hydrogenation halide component

Hydrogenation hydrogen halides, additions

Industrial processes hydrogen halides

Lead, elemental hydrogen halides

Leads hydrogen halides

Lead—oxygen bonds hydrogen halides

Looking Back Reactions of Alcohols with Hydrogen Halides

Mechanism hydrogen halide addition

Metal Hydrides vs. Hydrogen Halides

Metal alkoxides reactions with hydrogen halides

Metal halides hydrogen

Nitrile-Hydrogen Halide Systems

Nitriles reactions with hydrogen halides

Nitrogen—hydrogen bonds metal halides

Nitrogen—phosphorus bonds hydrogen halides

Nitrogen—silicon bonds hydrogen halides

Nitrogen—sulfur bonds hydrogen halides

Nonmetal hydrogen halides

Norbomene addition of hydrogen halides

Organoleads hydrogen halides

Organotins hydrogen halides

Other Hydrogen Halides

Oxygen—silicon bonds hydrogen halides

Oxygen—sulfur bonds hydrogen halides

Peculiarities of N-Vinylpyrroles Protonation with Hydrogen Halides

Phosphorus halides hydrogen

Phosphorus, elemental hydrogen halides

Photodissociation of hydrogen halides

Physical properties of the hydrogen halides

Polar addition hydrogen halides

Preparation and properties of hydrogen halides

Primary Processes, the Hydrogen Halides HC1, HBr, and HI

Primary alcohols hydrogen halide reactions

Promoters hydrogen halides

Propiolic acid addition of hydrogen halides

Reaction of acyl halides with hydrogen sulfide and its derivatives

Reactions of Halogens and Hydrogen Halides

Reactions of hydrogen halides

Reactions with hydrogen halides

Rearrangement hydrogen halides

Rearrangements in hydrogen halide addition to alkenes

Regioselectivity addition of hydrogen halides

Regioselectivity of Hydrogen Halide Addition Markovnikovs Rule

Regiospecificity of Hydrogen Halide Addition

Removal of hydrogen halide

Secondary alcohols hydrogen halide reactions

Selenium hydrogen halides

Silane, triethylionic hydrogenation acyl halides

Silanes hydrogen halides

Silicon halides hydrogen

Solubility of Hydrogen Halides in Nonaqueous Liquids

Stereochemistry hydrogen halides

Stereochemistry with hydrogen halides

Stereoselectivity addition of hydrogen halides to alkenes

Strong acids hydrogen halides

Subject hydrogen halides

Substitution reactions hydrogen halides

Sulfur hydrogen halides

THE HYDROGEN HALIDES

Tellurium hydrogen halides

Tertiary alcohols reaction with hydrogen halides

The Bond in a Hydrogen Halide

The Hydrogen Halides and Hydrohalic Acids

The Reaction of Alcohols with Hydrogen Halides

The hydrogen halides as nonaqueous solvents

The phosgene-hydrogen halide system

Thermodynamics dissociation of hydrogen halides

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