Search citation statements
Paper Sections
Citation Types
Year Published
Publication Types
Relationship
Authors
Journals
The Diels–Alder (“DA”) reaction is so familiar to organic chemists that the retro‐Diels–Alder or retro‐diene reaction (hereafter “rDA”) requires no conceptual introduction. However, a working definition is needed to indicate the coverage of this review. The intent is to include all reported examples of the general skeletal process excluded in this chapter. Any of the atoms in the starting material (cycloadduct) may be carbon or heteroatom, and substituents on all positions are allowed. In addition, any bond order available to the element in any oxidation state is included, as well as bonding to non‐nearest neighbor atoms (bicyclics, etc.). The volume of literature required separation of this review into two parts. Part I covers all expelled C–C dienophiles, i.e. those reactions that generate a new carbon‐carbon double or triple bond in the dienophile that is formed. Part II, to appear later, covers those expelled dienophiles in which one or both atoms is a heteroatom. Certain specific topics are intentionally omitted. These are: rDA reactions invoked under mass spectral conditions; rDA reactions of polymeric substrates; Electrocyclic processes, some of which are arguably very similar to rDA reactions (these are not addressed unless needed for clarification of an rDA sequence); and a thorough discussion of homo‐rDA reactions. CAS‐Online searches resulted in ca. 1,300 references, of which ca. 900 proved pertinent to the rDA topic as defined and delimited above. Active literature searching was halted in April 1995, but occasional more recent articles are included. Over 2,500 pertinent references were eventually found. Most were obtained by perusal of primary literature (articles) and secondary sources (books and reviews). Computer based search success was limited mainly by the failure of authors or abstractors to key‐word this topic, an especially common occurrence when the expelled dienophile was a simple substance such as N 2 or CO 2 . Overall, approximately 3,500 books, chapters, reviews, articles, and abstracts were consulted in an effort to make this review as comprehensive as possible. This was done with the certainty that some pertinent literature would be missed, tempered by the view that these omissions are probably also lost to any future rational search method. Many secondary sources proved valuable not only for in‐depth discussion of certain rDA reaction types, but also for providing comparisons with related topics. To assist the reader, these secondary sources are referenced (alphabetically by first author within broad subject areas) with a title or brief note on the topic(s) addressed. The first group lists earlier reviews with primary focus on rDA reactions, followed by items of Historical/General Interest, reviews that deal with Experimental Methods, DA reactions (general and specific), reviews of Related Topics (these impinge in more or less significant ways on rDA reactions), and general treatments of Theory and Mechanism.
The Diels–Alder (“DA”) reaction is so familiar to organic chemists that the retro‐Diels–Alder or retro‐diene reaction (hereafter “rDA”) requires no conceptual introduction. However, a working definition is needed to indicate the coverage of this review. The intent is to include all reported examples of the general skeletal process excluded in this chapter. Any of the atoms in the starting material (cycloadduct) may be carbon or heteroatom, and substituents on all positions are allowed. In addition, any bond order available to the element in any oxidation state is included, as well as bonding to non‐nearest neighbor atoms (bicyclics, etc.). The volume of literature required separation of this review into two parts. Part I covers all expelled C–C dienophiles, i.e. those reactions that generate a new carbon‐carbon double or triple bond in the dienophile that is formed. Part II, to appear later, covers those expelled dienophiles in which one or both atoms is a heteroatom. Certain specific topics are intentionally omitted. These are: rDA reactions invoked under mass spectral conditions; rDA reactions of polymeric substrates; Electrocyclic processes, some of which are arguably very similar to rDA reactions (these are not addressed unless needed for clarification of an rDA sequence); and a thorough discussion of homo‐rDA reactions. CAS‐Online searches resulted in ca. 1,300 references, of which ca. 900 proved pertinent to the rDA topic as defined and delimited above. Active literature searching was halted in April 1995, but occasional more recent articles are included. Over 2,500 pertinent references were eventually found. Most were obtained by perusal of primary literature (articles) and secondary sources (books and reviews). Computer based search success was limited mainly by the failure of authors or abstractors to key‐word this topic, an especially common occurrence when the expelled dienophile was a simple substance such as N 2 or CO 2 . Overall, approximately 3,500 books, chapters, reviews, articles, and abstracts were consulted in an effort to make this review as comprehensive as possible. This was done with the certainty that some pertinent literature would be missed, tempered by the view that these omissions are probably also lost to any future rational search method. Many secondary sources proved valuable not only for in‐depth discussion of certain rDA reaction types, but also for providing comparisons with related topics. To assist the reader, these secondary sources are referenced (alphabetically by first author within broad subject areas) with a title or brief note on the topic(s) addressed. The first group lists earlier reviews with primary focus on rDA reactions, followed by items of Historical/General Interest, reviews that deal with Experimental Methods, DA reactions (general and specific), reviews of Related Topics (these impinge in more or less significant ways on rDA reactions), and general treatments of Theory and Mechanism.
Die Synthese von Koordinationsverbindungen [CuLdam] · 3H2O (H2L = 7‐Oxa‐bicyclo[2.2.1]‐heptan‐2‐exo,3‐cis‐dicarbonsäure (1) und ihr 1‐Methyl‐Derivat 2; dam = Ethylendiamin, 1,2‐ und 1,3‐Propylendamin, 2,2′ ‐Dipyridyl, 1,10‐Phenanthrolin) wird beschrieben. Ergebnisse der VIS‐ und IR‐Spektroskopie sowie Angaben zum magnetischen Verhalten sind dargestellt. Röntgenkristallstrukturanalysen von [CuL1dipy] · 3H2O (1d) und [CuL2en]. 3H2O (2a) ergaben, daß die Dicarboxylat‐Anionen von 1 bzw. 2 als dreizähnige Chelatliganden auftreten. In 1 d ist das Cu‐Atom angenähert quadratisch‐pyramidal mit dem Brücken‐O‐Atom in apicaler Position koordiniert. In 2 a dagegen wird die Koordination durch ein O‐Atom einer zweiten [CuL2en]‐Baueinheit erweitert, und es liegt ein zentro‐symmetrisches Komplexdimeres mit oktaedrischer Koordination der beiden Cu‐Atome vor. Die Wassermoleküle sind nicht an der Koordination der Cu‐Atome beteiligt und bilden ein kompliziertes System von Wasserstoffbrücken im Kristall aus.
Binäre Carboxylatkomplexe von zweiwertigen 3 d‐Übergangsmetallionen mit der 5‐exo,6‐cis‐Dihydroxy‐7‐oxa‐bicyclo[2.2.1]heptan‐2‐exo,3‐cis‐dicarbonsäure (2) wurden in wäßriger Lösung synthetisiert und durch Elementaranalyse, IR‐ und Elektronenspektren sowie Magnetmessungen charakterisiert. Die thermische Zersetzung beginnt mit der Abspaltung von Wasser, es folgt die Zersetzung des organischen Liganden bis zur Bildung der Metalloxide. Die Stabilitätskonstanten der Komplexe wurden durch potentiometrische Titration bestimmt. Durch Röntgenkristallstrukturanalyse konnte gezeigt werden, daß das Dicarboxylat‐Anion von 2 in den Komplexen [NiL2(H2O)3] · H2O (2c) und [CuL2(H2O)2] · 2H2O (2 d) unterschiedliches Koordinationsverhalten aufweist. In 2 c tritt es als dreizähniger Chelatligand auf und bildet gemeinsam mit drei Wassermolekülen ein nur geringfügig verzerrtes Koordinationsoktaeder um das Ni‐Atom aus. Die beiden Hydroxylgruppen sind dabei koordinationschemisch inaktiv. In 2 d hingegen ist zusätzlich eine Hydroxylgruppe in die Koordination einbezogen, durch Wechselwirkung ihres O‐Atoms mit dem Cu‐Atom eines Nachbarmoleküls entsteht eine polymere Ketten‐struktur. Zwei Ecken im stark tetragonal verzerrten CuO6‐Oktaeder werden durch Wassermoleküle besetzt. In beiden Komplexen wird die Molekülpackung unter Einbeziehung der Kristallwassermoleküle durch ein Wasserstoffbrückennetz stabilisiert.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.