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Pathways for Combination

Other benzyl radicals, including the parent benzyl radieal, give reversible formation of quinonemethide derivatives (typically a mixture of a,/ - and a,o-coiipling products) in competition with ct,a-coupling (see also Section [Pg.37]

For combination processes involving cyanoalkyl radicals, reversible C,N-coupling occurs in competition with C,C-coupling. Steric factors appear to be important in determining the relative amounts of C,C- and C,N-coupling and [Pg.37]


Even though the rate of radical-radical reaction is determined by diffusion, this docs not mean there is no selectivity in the termination step. As with small radicals (Section 2.5), self-reaction may occur by combination or disproportionation. In some cases, there are multiple pathways for combination and disproportionation. Combination involves the coupling of two radicals (Scheme 5.1). The resulting polymer chain has a molecular weight equal to the sum of the molecular weights of the reactant species. If all chains are formed from initiator-derived radicals, then the combination product will have two initiator-derived ends. Disproportionation involves the transfer of a P-hydrogen from one propagating radical to the other. This results in the formation of two polymer molecules. Both chains have one initiator-derived end. One chain has an unsaturated end, the other has a saturated end (Scheme 5.1). [Pg.251]

Figure 22 The pulse sequence and coherence transfer pathways for combined Aif H ... Figure 22 The pulse sequence and coherence transfer pathways for combined Aif H ...
Figure 24 Pulse sequences and coherence transfer pathways for combined AI H REDOR-trMQ/MAS NMR (left) and AI H REDOR-fj-MQ/MAS NMR (right) experiments [85,92,93],... Figure 24 Pulse sequences and coherence transfer pathways for combined AI H REDOR-trMQ/MAS NMR (left) and AI H REDOR-fj-MQ/MAS NMR (right) experiments [85,92,93],...
The importance of biotin in nutrition and increasing commercial needs combine to suggest the need for short and economical synthesis. Retrosynthetic analysis using cysteine as SM goal suggested a number of synthetic pathways for study, one of which has been demonstrated as shown below. [Pg.140]

The citrate cycle is the final common pathway for the oxidation of acetyl-CoA derived from the metabolism of pyruvate, fatty acids, ketone bodies, and amino acids (Krebs, 1943 Greville, 1968). This is sometimes known as the Krebs or tricarboxylic acid cycle. Acetyl-CoA combines with oxaloacetate to form citrate which then undergoes a series of reactions involving the loss of two molecules of CO2 and four dehydrogenation steps. These reactions complete the cycle by regenerating oxaloacetate which can react with another molecule of acetyl-CoA (Figure 4). [Pg.117]

The second channel, producing CO, was first observed by Seakins and Leone [64], who estimated 40% branching to this channel. Later measurements by Lockenberg et al. [65] and Preses et al. [66] concluded the branching to CO is 18%. Note that decomposition of formaldehyde formed in reaction (26a) is not a possible source of CO due to the large barrier for formaldehyde decomposition. Marcy et al. [67] recently combined time-resolved Lourier spectroscopy experiments with direct dynamics classical trajectory calculations to examine the mechanism of the CO product channel. They observed two pathways for CO formation, neither of which involve crossing a TS. [Pg.249]

There are two pathways for the degradation of nitriles (a) direct formation of carboxylic acids by the activity of a nitrilase, for example, in Bacillus sp. strain OxB-1 and P. syringae B728a (b) hydration to amides followed by hydrolysis, for example, in P. chlororaphis (Oinuma et al. 2003). The monomer acrylonitrile occurs in wastewater from the production of polyacrylonitrile (PAN), and is hydrolyzed by bacteria to acrylate by the combined activity of a nitrilase (hydratase) and an amidase. Acrylate is then degraded by hydration to either lactate or P-hydroxypropionate. The nitrilase or amidase is also capable of hydrolyzing the nitrile group in a number of other nitriles (Robertson et al. 2004) including PAN (Tauber et al. 2000). [Pg.322]

Fig. 10.9 Possible reaction pathway for the formation of a cell. The important precursors are an RNA replicase and a self-replicating vesicle. The combination of these two in a protocell leads to a rapid, evolutionary optimisation of the replicase. The cellular structure is completed if an RNA-coded molecular species, for example, a lipid-synthesised ribozyme, is added to the system (Szostak et al., 2001)... [Pg.272]

It is most unusual for female moths to utilize just one compound as the pheromone. Rather a blend of compounds produced in precise ratios make up the species-specific pheromone. The production of this precise blend of chemical components is regulated in the biosynthetic pathway. The inherent specificities found within key enzymes in the pathway and combinations of enzymes is what is responsible for producing species specific ratios [13,31]. [Pg.111]


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Combination pathways

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