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Structural problems stabilizing unstable species

As noted in the introduction, in contrast to attack by nucleophiles, attack of electrophiles on saturated alkene-, polyene- or polyenyl-metal complexes creates special problems in that normally unstable 16-electron, unsaturated species are formed. To be isolated, these species must be stabilized by intramolecular coordination or via intermolecular addition of a ligand. Nevertheless, as illustrated in this chapter, reactions of significant synthetic utility can be developed with attention to these points. It is likely that this area will see considerable development in the future. In addition to refinement of electrophilic reactions of metal-diene complexes, synthetic applications may evolve from the coupling of carbon electrophiles with electron-rich transition metal complexes of alkenes, alkynes and polyenes, as well as allyl- and dienyl-metal complexes. Sequential addition of electrophiles followed by nucleophiles is also viable to rapidly assemble complex structures. [Pg.712]


See other pages where Structural problems stabilizing unstable species is mentioned: [Pg.82]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.871]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.587]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.281]    [Pg.503]    [Pg.347]    [Pg.2589]    [Pg.66]   


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Stability problems

Stability structure

Stabilization structural

Structural problems

Structurally unstable

Structures Problems

Unstability

Unstable

Unstable species

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