04604nam 2200613 a 450 991080886270332120200520144314.01-118-01645-91-118-01646-71-283-17562-297866131756251-118-01644-0(CKB)2550000000040725(EBL)697669(OCoLC)739116853(SSID)ssj0000523315(PQKBManifestationID)11322369(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000523315(PQKBWorkID)10542690(PQKB)10151634(MiAaPQ)EBC697669(EXLCZ)99255000000004072520101019d2011 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierHypercarbon chemistry /George A. Olah ... [et al.]2nd ed.Hoboken, N.J. J. WIley & Sonsc20111 online resource (476 p.)Description based upon print version of record0-470-93568-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.HYPERCARBON CHEMISTRY, Second Edition; CONTENTS; FOREWORD TO THE FIRST EDITION; PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION; PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION; 1: INTRODUCTION: GENERAL ASPECTS; 1.1. AIMS AND OBJECTIVES; 1.2. SOME DEFINITIONS; 1.3. STRUCTURES OF SOME TYPICAL HYPERCARBON SYSTEMS; 1.4. THE THREE-CENTER BOND CONCEPT: TYPES OF THREE-CENTER BONDS; 1.5. THE BONDING IN MORE HIGHLY DELOCALIZED SYSTEMS; 1.6. REACTIONS INVOLVING HYPERCARBON INTERMEDIATES; REFERENCES; 2: CARBON-BRIDGED (ASSOCIATED) METAL ALKYLS; 2.1. INTRODUCTION; 2.2. BRIDGED ORGANOALUMINUM COMPOUNDS2.3. BERYLLIUM AND MAGNESIUM COMPOUNDS2.4. ORGANOLITHIUM COMPOUNDS; 2.5. ORGANOCOPPER, SILVER, AND GOLD COMPOUNDS; 2.6. SCANDIUM, YTTRIUM, AND LANTHANIDE COMPOUNDS; 2.7. TITANIUM, ZIRCONIUM, AND HAFNIUM COMPOUNDS; 2.8. MANGANESE COMPOUNDS; 2.9. OTHER METAL COMPOUNDS WITH BRIDGING ALKYL GROUPS; 2.10. AGOSTIC SYSTEMS CONTAINING CARBON-HYDROGEN-METAL 3c-2e BONDS; 2.11. CONCLUSIONS; REFERENCES; 3: CARBORANES AND METALLACARBORANES; 3.1. INTRODUCTION; 3.2. CARBORANE STRUCTURES AND SKELETAL ELECTRON NUMBERS; 3.2.1. Closo Carboranes; 3.2.2. Nido and Arachno Carboranes3.2.3. Carbon Sites in Carboranes Skeletal Connectivities k; 3.2.4. Skeletal Bond Orders in Boranes and Carboranes; 3.3. LOCALIZED BOND SCHEMES FOR CLOSO BORANES AND CARBORANES; 3.3.1. Lipscomb's Styx Rules and Williams' Stx Rules; 3.3.2. Bond Orders and Skeletal Connectivities; 3.3.3. Bond Networks and Skeletal Connectivities; 3.3.4. Calculated Charge Distributions and Edge Bond Orders; 3.4. MO TREATMENTS OF CLOSO BORANES AND CARBORANES; 3.5. THE BONDING IN NIDO AND ARACHNO CARBORANES; 3.5.1. Localized Bond Schemes; 3.5.2. MO Treatments of Nido and Arachno Boranes and Carboranes4: MIXED METAL-CARBON CLUSTERS AND METAL CARBIDES4.1. INTRODUCTION; 4.2. COMPLEXES OF CnHn RING SYSTEMS WITH A METAL ATOM: NIDO-SHAPED MCn CLUSTERS; 4.3. METAL COMPLEXES OF ACYCLIC UNSATURATED LIGANDS, CnHn+2; 4.4. COMPLEXES OF UNSATURATED ORGANIC LIGANDS WITH TWO OR MORE METAL ATOMS: MIXED METAL-CARBON CLUSTERS; 4.5. METAL CLUSTERS INCORPORATING CORE HYPERCARBON ATOMS; 4.6. BULK METAL CARBIDES; 4.7. METALLATED CARBOCATIONS; 4.8. CONCLUSIONS; REFERENCES; 5: HYPERCOORDINATE CARBOCATIONS AND THEIR BORANE ANALOGS; 5.1. GENERAL CONCEPT OF CARBOCATIONS: CARBENIUM VERSUS CARBONIUM IONS5.1.1. Trivalent-Tricoordinate (Classical) Carbenium IonsThe essential new edition of the book that put hypercarbon chemistry on the map A comprehensive and contemporary treatment of the chemistry of hydrocarbons (alkanes, alkenes, alkynes, and aromatics) towards electrophiles, Hypercarbon Chemistry, Second Edition deals with all major aspects of such chemistry involved in hydrocarbon transformations, and of the structural and reaction chemistry of carboranes, mixed hydrides in which both carbon and boron atoms participate in the polyhedral molecular frameworks. Despite the firmly established tetravalency, carbon can bond simultaneCarbonium ionsOrganometallic chemistryCarbonium ions.Organometallic chemistry.547.01Olah George A(George Andrew),1927-16147MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910808862703321Hypercarbon chemistry4078506UNINA