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Organotrifluoroborates are tolerant of air and moisture [1] and are easy to handle and purify. [2] They are often used in organic synthesis as alternatives to boronic acids (RB(OH) 2 ), boronate esters (RB(OR′) 2 ), and organoboranes (R 3 B), particularly for Suzuki-Miyaura coupling .
3-Methylthiophene is an organosulfur compound with the formula CH 3 C 4 H 3 S. It is a colorless, flammable liquid. It can be produced by sulfidation of 2-methylsuccinate. [1] Like its isomer 2-methylthiophene, its commercial synthesis involvess vapor-phase dehydrogenation of
Formyl functional group is shown in blue. Formylation refers to any chemical processes in which a compound is functionalized with a formyl group (-CH=O). In organic chemistry, the term is most commonly used with regards to aromatic compounds (for example the conversion of benzene to benzaldehyde in the Gattermann–Koch reaction).
Phenylboronic acid or benzeneboronic acid, abbreviated as PhB(OH) 2 where Ph is the phenyl group C 6 H 5 - and B(OH) 2 is a boronic acid containing a phenyl substituent and two hydroxyl groups attached to boron. Phenylboronic acid is a white powder and is commonly used in organic synthesis.
A boronic acid is an organic compound related to boric acid (B(OH) 3) in which one of the three hydroxyl groups (−OH) is replaced by an alkyl or aryl group (represented by R in the general formula R−B(OH) 2). [1] As a compound containing a carbon–boron bond, members of this class thus belong to the larger class of organoboranes.
The anhydrides are named diboroxanes, H 2 BOBH 2, as the base compound and H being able to be substituted, e.g. tetraethyldiboroxane, as the anhydride for diethylborinic acid. Organic naming standard in the Bluebook allows skeletal replacement naming where the name is shorter, 3-borapentan-3-ol versus diethyl borinic acid.
4-Formylphenyl boronic acid crystallizes in colorless needles [2] or is obtained as an odorless, whitish powder, which dissolves little in cold but better in hot water. The compound is quite stable [4] and readily forms dimers and cyclic trimeric anhydrides, which complicate purification and tend to protodeboronize, a secondary reaction that occurs frequently in the Suzuki coupling, with ...
5,10-Methylenetetrahydrofolate (N5,N10-Methylenetetrahydrofolate; 5,10-CH 2-THF) is cofactor in several biochemical reactions. It exists in nature as the diastereoisomer [6R]-5,10-methylene-THF. As an intermediate in one-carbon metabolism, 5,10-CH 2 -THF converts to 5-methyltetrahydrofolate , 5-formyltetrahydrofolate , and methenyltetrahydrofolate.