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Rhodium naming

This is a chapter written entirely by a chemist named Rhodium (with guest speaker Osmium ). Rhodium is, as far as Strike is concerned, the world s leading underground scientist. Knowledgeable in nearly every aspect of drug chemistry, this chemist has been the savior for many a person that was lost. Here he has contributed some new reactions for your reading pleasure. Radical stuff that you can bet will become the next wave of synthesis protocol. The rest of this chapter is Rhodium s voice.]... [Pg.164]

G-19 Dicarboxylic Acids. The C-19 dicarboxyhc acids are generally mixtures of isomers formed by the reaction of carbon monoxide on oleic acid. Since the reaction produces a mixture of isomers, no single chemical name can be used to describe them. Names that have been used include 2-nonyldecanedioic acid, 2-octylundecanedioic acid, l,8-(9)-heptadecanedicarboxyhc acid, and 9-(10)-carboxystearic acid. The name 9-(10)-carboxystearic acid can be used correctiy if the product is made with no double bond isomerization (rhodium triphenylphosphine catalyst system). [Pg.63]

Rhodium was discovered in 1803 by the eminent Norfolk scientist W.H. Wollaston he dissolved platinum metal concentrates in aqua regia and found that on removing platinum and palladium he was left with a red solution. From this he obtained the salt Na3RhCl6, which yielded the metal on reduction with hydrogen. The rose-red colour (Greek rhodon) of many rhodium salts gave the element its name. [Pg.78]

In the case of terminal C=C (1,2 addition units), i.e. when R=R =H and R" (or R111) = polymer chain, two types of hydride migration are possible, namely (i) The Markownikoff s addition which would lead to the formation of B type repeating units and (ii) The anti Markownikoff s addition which would result in the formation of the observed repeating units C. In the case of Markownikoff s type addition the hydride transfer occurs to Ca and results in the formation of branched alkyl-rhodium intermediate complex shown by Structure 2. Whereas when anti Markownikoff s addition occurs, the resulting intermediate alkyl-rhodium complex has linear alkyl ligand as shown by Structure 3. [Pg.404]

Name from rhodon (Greek = rose) some rhodium salts are pink Properties... [Pg.135]

A somewhat unusual copper catalyst, namely a zeolite in which at least 25% of its rhodium ions had been exchanged by Cu(II), was active in decomposition of ethyl diazoacetate at room temperature 372). In the absence of appropriate reaction partners, diethyl maleate and diethyl fumarate were the major products. The selectivity was a function of the zeolite activation temperature, but the maleate prevailed in all cases. Contrary to the copper salt-catalyzed carbene dimer formation 365), the maleate fumarate ratio was found to be relatively constant at various catalyst concentrations. When Cu(II) was reduced to Cu(I), an improved catalytic activity was observed. [Pg.226]

Of the three catalytic systems so far recognized as being capable of giving fast reaction rates for methanol carbonylation—namely, iodide-promoted cobalt, rhodium, and iridium—two are operated commercially on a large scale. The cobalt and rhodium processes manifest some marked differences in the reaction area (4) (see Table I). The lower reactivity of the cobalt system requires high reaction temperatures. Very high partial pressures of carbon monoxide are then required in the cobalt system to... [Pg.256]

Takasago A catalytic process for the enantioselective isomerization of allylic amines. The catalyst is a chiral rhodium complex. Used in the manufacture of (-)menthol. Named after Takasago International Corporation, the Japanese company which commercialized the process in 1983. [Pg.264]

Complex 9 (Scheme 43.3) can be reduced by different redox equivalents to the active rhodium(I) species 10 namely, by electrons, formate [37, 38], and hydrogen. This hydrido complex then transfers the hydride ion onto the nicotinamide. In electrochemical applications, TOFs in the range of 5 to 11 h-1 have been reported [31, 39]. It is noteworthy that this complex accepts NAD+ and NADP+ as substrates with the same efficiency and almost exclusively produces the 1,4-reduced cofactor (selectivity >99%). [Pg.1476]

Rhodium (Rh, [Kr]4t/x5v1), name from the Greek po ov (rhodon rose). Discovered (1803) by the English chemist William Hyde Wollaston. [Pg.431]

Rhodium - the atomic number is 45 and the chemical symbol is Rh. The name derives from the Greek rhodon for rose because of the rose color of dilute solutions of its salts . It was discovered by the English chemist and physicist William Hyde Wollaston in 1803 in a crude platinum ore. [Pg.18]

Scheme 6.27 considers other, formally confined, conformers of cycloocta-l,3,5,7-tetraene (COT) in complexes with metals. In the following text, M(l,5-COT) and M(l,3-COT) stand for the tube and chair structures, respectively. M(l,5-COT) is favored in neutral (18-electron) complexes with nickel, palladium, cobalt, or rhodium. One-electron reduction transforms these complexes into 19-electron forms, which we can identify as anion-radicals of metallocomplexes. Notably, the anion-radicals of the nickel and palladium complexes retain their M(l,5-COT) geometry in both the 18- and 19-electron forms. When the metal is cobalt or rhodium, transition in the 19-electron form causes quick conversion of M(l,5-COT) into M(l,3-COT) form (Shaw et al. 2004, reference therein). This difference should be connected with the manner of spin-charge distribution. The nickel and palladium complexes are essentially metal-based anion-radicals. In contrast, the SOMO is highly delocalized in the anion-radicals of cobalt and rhodium complexes, with at least half of the orbital residing in the COT ring. For this reason, cyclooctateraene flattens for a while and then acquires the conformation that is more favorable for the spatial structure of the whole complex, namely, M(l,3-COT) (see Schemes 6.1 and 6.27). [Pg.338]

In light of these significant challenges, Evans and Leahy reexamined the rhodium-catalyzed allylic alkylation using copper(I) enolates, which should be softer and less basic nucleophiles [23]. The copper(I) enolates were expected to circumvent the problems typically associated with enolate nucleophiles in metal-allyl chemistry, namely ehmina-tion of the metal-aUyl intermediate and polyalkylation as well as poor regio- and stereocontrol. Hence, the transmetallation of the lithium enolate derived from acetophenone with a copper(I) hahde salt affords the requisite copper] I) enolate, which permits the efficient regio- and enantiospecific rhodium-catalyzed allylic alkylation reaction of a variety of unsymmetrical acychc alcohol derivatives (Tab. 10.3). [Pg.197]

The picture is different for the bimetallic ruthenium-rhodium systems both metals in the presence of iodide promoters and CO give anionic iodocarbonyl species, namely [Ru(C0) I ] and [Rh(CO)2l2] j but the range of I, CO concentration and temperature in which the anions exist and are catalytically active in carbonylation reactions is different. [Ru(CO)3l2] species in fact are extensively transformed at high temperature and low carbon monoxide pressure by an excess of I (i.e. I/Ru 50) into catalytically inactive [Ru(CO)2l4] (v q 2047, 1990 cm"l in THF (JJ.)) (eq. 1), whereas [Rh(CO)2l2] can work in the carbonylation process only in the presence of a large excess of I"" (I/Rh 100-1000) which prevents reduction to metal (12) (for instance at 150 C rhodium(I) carbonyl halides, [Rh(CO) X2]"", without CH3I under a CO/H2 pressure of 10 MPa are completely reduced to metal). [Pg.223]


See other pages where Rhodium naming is mentioned: [Pg.1113]    [Pg.1113]    [Pg.1113]    [Pg.1113]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.933]    [Pg.172]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.294]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.143]    [Pg.569]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.842]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.466]    [Pg.1171]    [Pg.1217]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.356]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.301]    [Pg.480]    [Pg.482]    [Pg.720]    [Pg.791]    [Pg.156]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.711 , Pg.743 ]




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