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Experimental Organic Chemistry 3rd edition [Mīkstie vāki]

(University of Reading, UK), (Loughborough University, UK), (University of Oxford, UK)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 688 pages, height x width x depth: 244x191x36 mm, weight: 1452 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 18-Aug-2017
  • Izdevniecība: John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1119952387
  • ISBN-13: 9781119952381
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  • Cena: 79,36 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 688 pages, height x width x depth: 244x191x36 mm, weight: 1452 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 18-Aug-2017
  • Izdevniecība: John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1119952387
  • ISBN-13: 9781119952381
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

The definitive guide to the principles and practice of experimental organic chemistry - fully updated and now featuring more than 100 experiments

The latest edition of this popular guide to experimental organic chemistry takes students from their first day in the laboratory right through to complex research procedures. All sections have been updated to reflect new techniques, equipment and technologies, and the text has been revised with an even sharper focus on practical skills and procedures.

The first half of the book is devoted to safe laboratory practice as well as purification and analytical techniques; particularly spectroscopic analysis. The second half contains step-by-step experimental procedures, each one illustrating a basic principle, or important reaction type. Tried and tested over almost three decades, over 100 validated experiments are graded according to their complexity and all are chosen to highlight important chemical transformations and to teach key experimental skills.

New sections cover updated health and safety guidelines, additional spectroscopic techniques, electronic notebooks and record keeping, and techniques, such as semi-automated chromatography and enabling technologies such as the use of microwave and flow chemistry. New experiments include transition metal-catalysed cross-coupling, organocatalysis, asymmetric synthesis, flow chemistry, and microwave-assisted synthesis. Key aspects of this third edition include:

  • Detailed descriptions of the correct use of common apparatus used in the organic laboratory
  • Outlines of practical skills that all chemistry students must learn
  • Highlights of aspects of health and safety in the laboratory, both in the first section and throughout the experimental procedures
  • Four new sections reflecting advances in techniques and technologies, from electronic databases and information retrieval to semi-automated chromatography
  • More than 100 validated experiments of graded complexity from introductory to research level
  • A user-friendly experiment directory
  • An instructor manual and PowerPoint slides of the figures in the book available on a companion website

A comprehensive guide to contemporary organic chemistry laboratory principles, procedures, protocols, tools and techniques, Experimental Organic Chemistry, Third Edition is both an essential laboratory textbook for students of chemistry at all levels, and a handy bench reference for experienced chemists. 

About the authors ix
Preface to the third edition xi
About the companion website xv
PART 1 LABORATORY PRACTICE
1(328)
1 Safety in the chemical laboratory
3(12)
1.1 Essential rules for laboratory safety
4(3)
1.2 Hazardous chemicals
7(4)
1.3 Disposal of hazardous waste
11(1)
1.4 Accident procedures
12(3)
2 Glassware and equipment in the laboratory
15(46)
2.1 Glass equipment
16(5)
2.2 Hardware
21(3)
2.3 Heating
24(6)
2.4 Stirring
30(2)
2.5 Vacuum pumps
32(10)
2.6 The rotary evaporator
42(4)
2.7 Catalytic hydrogenation
46(2)
2.8 Ozonolysis
48(2)
2.9 Irradiation
50(4)
2.10 Compressed gases
54(7)
3 Organic reactions: From starting materials to pure organic product
61(124)
3.1 Handling chemicals
62(19)
3.2 The reaction
81(24)
3.3 Purification of organic compounds
105(80)
4 Qualitative analysis of organic compounds
185(22)
4.1 Purity
185(17)
4.2 Determination of structure using chemical methods
202(5)
5 Spectroscopic analysis of organic compounds
207(104)
5.1 Absorption spectroscopy
207(2)
5.2 Infrared spectroscopy
209(18)
5.3 Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
227(52)
5.4 Ultraviolet spectroscopy
279(16)
5.5 Mass spectrometry
295(16)
6 Keeping records: The laboratory notebook and chemical literature
311(18)
6.1 The laboratory notebook
312(10)
6.2 The research report
322(5)
6.3 The chemical literature
327(2)
PART 2 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
329(298)
Introduction
331(2)
List of experiments
333(20)
Experiments that can be taken in sequence
353(1)
Experiments that can be used to compare directly different techniques for undertaking a reaction
354(1)
Experiments that illustrate particular techniques
354(1)
7 Functional group interconversions
355(88)
7.1 Simple transformations
355(11)
7.2 Reactions of alkenes
366(20)
7.3 Substitution
386(4)
7.4 Reduction
390(34)
7.5 Oxidation
424(12)
7.6 Rearrangements
436(7)
8 Carbon--carbon bond-forming reactions
443(102)
8.1 Grignard and organolithium reagents
444(12)
8.2 Enolate anions
456(28)
8.3 Heteroatom-stabilized carbanions
484(20)
8.4 Aromatic electrophilic substitution
504(10)
8.5 Pericyclic reactions
514(20)
8.6 Metal-mediated coupling reactions
534(11)
9 Experiments using enabling technologies
545(24)
9.1 Microwave chemistry
545(9)
9.2 Flow chemistry
554(15)
10 Projects
569(58)
10.1 Natural product isolation and identification
569(9)
10.2 Project in organic synthesis
578(30)
10.3 Aspects of physical organic chemistry
608(19)
APPENDICES
627(22)
Organic solvents
629(6)
Spectroscopic correlation tables
635(14)
Index of Chemicals 649(8)
General Index 657
Philippa B. Cranwell, PhD is a Lecturer in the Department of Chemistry, University of Reading, UK.

Laurence M. Harwood, PhD is Professor of Organic Chemistry in the Department of Chemistry and Director of the Chemical Analysis Facility, University of Reading, UK.

Christopher J. Moody, PhD is Sir Jesse Boot Professor in the School of Chemistry, University of Nottingham, UK.