Advanced Organic Chemistry: Part B: Reaction and Synthesis

Front Cover
Springer Science & Business Media, Nov 24, 2007 - Science - 1321 pages

Since its original appearance in 1977, Advanced Organic Chemistry has maintained its place as the premier textbook in the field, offering broad coverage of the structure, reactivity and synthesis of organic compounds. As in the earlier editions, the text contains extensive references to both the primary and review literature and provides examples of data and reactions that illustrate and document the generalizations. While the text assumes completion of an introductory course in organic chemistry, it reviews the fundamental concepts for each topic that is discussed.

The two-part fifth edition has been substantially revised and reorganized for greater clarity. Among the changes: Updated material reflecting advances in the field since 2001’s Fourth Edition, especially in computational chemistry; A companion Web site provides digital models for study of structure, reaction and selectivity; Solutions to the exercises provided to instructors online.

The control of reactivity to achieve specific syntheses is one of the overarching goals of organic chemistry. Part B describes the most general and useful synthetic reactions, organized on the basis of reaction type. Together with Part A: Structure and Mechanisms, the two volumes are intended to provide the advanced undergraduate or beginning graduate student in chemistry with a sufficient foundation to comprehend and use the research literature in organic chemistry.

 

Contents

Alkylation of Enolates and Other Carbon Nucleophiles
1
3
7
General References
55
4
57
xxiv
63
5
73
General References
200
Functional Group Interconversion
215
310
593
328
599
Problems
604
2
609
Organometallic Compounds of Group I and II Metals
619
General References
666
Reactions Involving Transition Metals
675
1
706

Problems
224
xxviii
264
Electrophilic Additions to CarbonCarbon Multiple Bonds
290
2
304
4
314
5
321
3
333
General References
358
Reduction of CarbonCarbon Multiple Bonds Carbonyl
367
289
456
Problems
462
5
466
Introduction
473
293
587
337
727
344
974
352
985
Problems
992
Aromatic Substitution Reactions
1003
Problems
1056
Oxidations
1063
xxx
1074
Multistep Syntheses
1163
General References
1259
References
1271
Index
1297
Copyright

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Page 9 - RE Ireland, RH Mueller, and AK Willard, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 98, 2868 (1972); RE Ireland, P.
Page 1271 - WS Matthews, JE Bares, JE Bartmess, FG Bordwell, FJ Cornforth, GE Drucker, Z. Margolin, RJ McCallum, GJ McCollum, and NR Vanier, J.

About the author (2007)

Francis A. Carey is a native of Pennsylvania, educated in the public schools of Philadelphia, at Drexel University (B.S. in chemistry, 1959), and at Penn State (Ph.D. 1963). Following postdoctoral work at Harvard and military service, he was appointed to the chemistry faculty of the University of Virginia in 1966. Prior to retiring in 2000, he regularly taught the two-semester lecture courses in general chemistry and organic chemistry. With his students, Professor Carey has published over forty research papers in synthetic and mechanistic organic chemistry.
Professor Sundberg is primarily engaged in teaching and chemical education. Along with Francis A. Carey he is the author of “Advanced Organic Chemistry. Professor Sundberg is also interested in synthetic methodology in heterocyclic chemistry and is the author of “Indoles” in the Best Synthetic Methods Series (Academic Press, 1996).

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