Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Weakly active chemical entities

A mechanophore (blue in Fig. 2a) is a strategically designed chemical entity which responds to mechanical force in a predictable and useful manner (Fig. 2d-f). The polymer strand here acts as an actuator to transmit macroscopic force to the target. For a fully extended polymer chain, the maximum tension force is at the middle point of the chain contour. So the mechanophore should be incorporated into the middle of the chain with its active bond along the chain contotu (Fig. 2a) [15, 29, 32]. Examples of mechanochemical reactions include homolytic scission of weak bonds (diazo [33]), electrocyclic ring-opening (benzocyclobutenes [29], spiropyrans [32, 34 5], gem-dichlorocyclopropanes [46-49], ge/n-difluorocyclo-propanes [30, 50], and epoxide [51]), cycloreversion reactions (cyclobutane derivatives [52-56], Diels-Alder adducts [57, 58], 1,3-dipolar adducts [59, 60], and 1,2-dioxetanes [61]), dative bond scission [62-64], and flex-activated reactions [34, 65, 66], as recently reviewed by Bielawski [67]. [Pg.141]


See other pages where Weakly active chemical entities is mentioned: [Pg.34]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.425]    [Pg.156]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.993]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.1175]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.419]    [Pg.64]    [Pg.503]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.348]    [Pg.284]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.431]    [Pg.298]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.34 ]




SEARCH



Chemical activity

Chemical entities

Chemically active

Entity

© 2024 chempedia.info