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Tertiary oxygen balance

Table 1.2 Oxygen balance of some primary, secondary and tertiary explosives. Table 1.2 Oxygen balance of some primary, secondary and tertiary explosives.
The acetoxy dienone (218) gives phenol (220). Here, an alternative primary photoreaction competes effectively with the dienone 1,5-bonding expulsion of the lOjS-acetoxy substituent and hydrogen uptake from the solvent (dioxane). In the case of the hydroxy analog (219) the two paths are balanced and products from both processes, phenol (220) and diketone (222), are isolated. In the formation of the spiro compound (222) rupture of the 1,10-bond in the dipolar intermediate (221) predominates over the normal electron transmission in aprotic solvents from the enolate moiety via the three-membered ring to the electron-deficient carbon. While in protic solvents and in 10-methyl compounds this process is inhibited by the protonation of the enolate system in the dipolar intermediate [cf. (202), (203)], proton elimination from the tertiary hydroxy group in (221) could reverse the efficiencies of the two oxygens as electron sources. [Pg.335]

Balanced No, water must be added to the right-hand side to balance the equation. Generic process Benzene has substituted for the ether oxygen at both tertiary carbons. [Pg.288]


See other pages where Tertiary oxygen balance is mentioned: [Pg.248]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.170]    [Pg.227]    [Pg.279]    [Pg.242]    [Pg.195]    [Pg.2]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.19 ]




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