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Compounds polynuclear

Polysilanes, whose heavier analogues have not yet been structurally characterized, include  [Pg.150]

GeGeOO ring C2 and non-planar GeOO/OOGe torsion = 19.5° [Pg.152]


Any substance capable of reacting with free radicals to form products that do not reinitiate the oxidation reaction could be considered to function as free-radical traps. The quinones are known to scavenge alkyl free radicals. Many polynuclear hydrocarbons show activity as inhibitors of oxidation and are thought to function by trapping free radicals [25]. Addition of R to quinone or to a polynuclear compound on either the oxygen or nitrogen atoms produces adduct radicals that can undergo subsequent dimerization, disproportionation, or reaction with a second R to form stable products. [Pg.401]

Figure 2 Carbonato-bridged polynuclear compounds of varying nuclearity with different terminal ligands. Figure 2 Carbonato-bridged polynuclear compounds of varying nuclearity with different terminal ligands.
Formation of polynuclear lead species with parameters close to isolated lead bromophenoxides during DPC synthesis was found by EXAFS of frozen active reaction mixtures (Pb-0 = 2.34 A, Pb Pb = 3.83 A). Noteworthy, in samples of final reaction mixtures, where catalyst was inactive, short Pb Pb distances were absent. These polynuclear compounds have been tested as lead sources in large-scale runs (small scale reactions were inconclusive due to heterogeneity of reaction mixtures because these compounds are less soluble than PbO). It was found that the use of lead bromophenoxides instead of PbO increases both Pd TON (by 25-35%), and reaction selectivity (from 65 - 67 % to 75 - 84 %). Activity of different lead bromophenoxides was about the same (within experimental error) but the best selectivity was observed for complex Pb602(0Ph)6Br2. Therefore, the gain in selectivity vs. loss due to additional preparation step should be analyzed for practical application. [Pg.191]

Binuclear and polynuclear compounds with direct metal-metal interaction constitute a large class of transition metal complexes which play an important role also in organometallic chemistry. Generally, the frontier orbitals of these compounds are engaged in metal-metal bonding. Consequently, redox processes affect the metal-metal interaction. The same is true for the luminescence of such complexes since it involves also thg frontier orbitals. The binuclear complex Pt2(pop) 36) (pop = diphosphonate) and... [Pg.165]

A metal cluster can be considered as a polynuclear compound which contains at least one metal-metal bond. A better definition of cluster catalysis is a reaction in which at least one site of the cluster molecule is mechanistically necessary. Theoretically, homogeneous clusters should be capable of multiple-site catalysis. Many heterogeneous catalytic reactions require multiple-site catalysis and for these reasons discrete molecular metal clusters are often proposed as models of metal surfaces in the processes of chemisorption and catalysis. The use of carbonyl clusters as catalysts for hydrogenation reactions has been the subject of a number of papers, an important question actually being whether the cluster itself is the species responsible for the hydrogenation. Often the cluster is recovered from the catalytic reaction, or is the only species spectroscopically observed under catalytic conditions. These data have been taken as evidence for cluster catalysis. [Pg.125]

As it was shown in [15-18], such compounds, with bridging atoms of deprotonated amino alcohol, are formed when aminoalcoholate complexes of metal (III) react with bivalent 3d-metal ions. Many representatives of these compounds were synthesized in crystalline state the polynuclear compounds were also found to form in aqueous and methanol solutions. The structure of 2Co(III) - Ni(II) tri-nuclear complex, according to [17,18], is shown below in Figure 2. [Pg.346]

The interactions of dimethyl- and diethylzinc with bulky tris(hydroxyphenyl)methanes, Scheme 86, yielded, depending on the reaction conditions, a variety of alkylzinc alkoxides, featuring two-, three-, and four-coordinate zinc centers. These polynuclear compounds (Figure 63 shows the trinuclear ethylzinc derivative 136) are relatively poor catalysts for the co-polymerization of cyclohexene oxide and carbon dioxide.197... [Pg.369]

Parameters of pseudospin magnetic Hamiltonians (see the description in Section 6.3.1, points 1-4). It is important to note that the multiplicity of the pseudospin can become quite large in the case of polynuclear compounds with weakly interacting magnetic sites. [Pg.172]

Abstract This review deals with spin crossover effects in small polynuclear clusters, particularly dinuclear species, and in extended network molecular materials, some of which have interpenetrated network structures. Fe(II)Fe(II) species are the main focus but Co(II)Co(II) compounds are included. The sections on dinuclear compounds include short background reviews on (i) synergism of SCO and spin-spin magnetic exchange (ii) cooperativity (memory effects) in polynuclear compounds, and (iii) the design of dinu-... [Pg.210]


See other pages where Compounds polynuclear is mentioned: [Pg.132]    [Pg.164]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.324]    [Pg.201]    [Pg.312]    [Pg.502]    [Pg.137]    [Pg.555]    [Pg.555]    [Pg.555]    [Pg.555]    [Pg.555]    [Pg.556]    [Pg.560]    [Pg.561]    [Pg.597]    [Pg.639]    [Pg.647]    [Pg.656]    [Pg.854]    [Pg.170]    [Pg.181]    [Pg.334]    [Pg.740]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.212]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.269]    [Pg.160]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.196 , Pg.200 ]




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Aromatic Compounds, definition polynuclear (

Aromatic compounds polynuclear

Aromatic compounds polynuclear hydrocarbons

Carboxylates polynuclear compounds

Coordination compounds polynuclear

INDEX polynuclear compounds

Ordering of central atoms in polynuclear organometallic compounds

Other Polynuclear Compounds

Platinum compounds polynuclear

Polynuclear Aromatic Hydrocarbons and Heterocyclic Compounds

Polynuclear Compounds Containing a Bridgehead Nitrogen

Polynuclear Compounds with More than One Nitrogen Ring

Polynuclear aromatic compound-alkali metal

Polynuclear aromatic compounds aromaticity

Polynuclear aromatic compounds carcinogens

Polynuclear aromatic compounds chemistry

Polynuclear aromatic compounds pyrolysis studies

Polynuclear aromatic compounds structures

Polynuclear aromatic compounds synthesis

Polynuclear aromatic compounds, PNAs

Polynuclear aromatic compounds, alkylation

Polynuclear compounds additive names

Polynuclear compounds bridging ligands

Polynuclear compounds cyclic

Polynuclear compounds nomenclature

Polynuclear compounds numbering central atoms

Polynuclear compounds organometallics

Polynuclear compounds oxidation processes

Polynuclear compounds reduction processes

Polynuclear compounds structure

Polynuclear compounds, inert metal

Polynuclear compounds, inert metal complexes

Polynuclear compounds, oxidation

Polynuclear heterocyclic compounds, synthesis

Pyrolysis, polynuclear aromatic compound

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