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  2. Transition metal NHC complex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transition_metal_NHC_complex

    In coordination chemistry, a transition metal NHC complex is a metal complex containing one or more N-heterocyclic carbene ligands. Such compounds are the subject of much research, in part because of prospective applications in homogeneous catalysis. One such success is the second generation Grubbs catalyst. [1] IMes is a popular NHC ligand.

  3. Cyclic alkyl amino carbenes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclic_alkyl_amino_carbenes

    This effect can be used to stabilize highly reactive main group and transition metal compounds. [6] [22] Because excessive steric hindrance can be an issue for some reactivity, NHCs and CAACs bearing substituents with multiple spatial conformations (e.g. cyclohexyl) offer "flexible steric bulk" for catalysis.

  4. N-Heterocyclic carbene boryl anion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N-heterocyclic_carbene...

    Anionic boryl ligands can covalently bond to transition metals, which is different than how it bonds to main group elements (ionically). [19] These boryl ligands σ-bond but also are able to receive π-back donation into the vacant p z orbital that the boron has. It is said that boryl ligands, like NHC boryl anions, are the most effective ...

  5. N-Heterocyclic olefins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N-heterocyclic_olefins

    When a dimethyl group was added to C exo, the reaction no longer proceeds this way, and was able to polymerize lactide, δ-valerolactone, and ω-pentadecalactone. While this broadened the scope and speed of the polymerization, the reaction was difficult to control due to the formation of an enolate intermediate.

  6. Main group organometallic chemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_group_organometallic...

    When the alkyl group bridges two main group elements, the bonding is called three-center two-electron bonds. This pattern is seen for dimethyl beryllium and trimethylaluminium. In the case of methyl lithium, the methyl group can be shared (bonded to) three Li centers. These bonding aspects influence the structures: Trimethylaluminium, dimethyl ...

  7. Dispersion stabilized molecules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dispersion_stabilized...

    Adding "steric hindrance" to a molecule's reactive site through bulky groups is a common strategy in molecular chemistry to stabilize reactive moieties within a molecule. [3] In this case bulky ligands like terphenyls , bulky alkoxides , aryl-substituted NHCs , etc. serve as a protective wrapper on the molecule. [ 1 ]

  8. Dinitrogen complexes of main-group elements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinitrogen_complexes_of...

    One quintessential dinitrogen complex of a main group element is Gernot Frenking’s triphenylphosphinazine, first reported in 2013 in Angewandte Communications. [6] This compound was notable for demonstrating the double Lewis acid behavior of dinitrogen, as the publication describes the N 2 moiety in the doubly excited 1 Γ g state with four lone pairs on N—N fragment.

  9. Carbon–hydrogen bond activation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon–hydrogen_bond...

    In organic chemistry and organometallic chemistry, carbon–hydrogen bond activation (C−H activation) is a type of organic reaction in which a carbon–hydrogen bond is cleaved and replaced with a C−X bond (X ≠ H is typically a main group element, like carbon, oxygen, or nitrogen).