You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
The increasing number of publications that use tellurium clearly demonstrates the important role of tellurium compounds as unique and powerful tools in a broad range of organic chemical manipulations, often characterized by their selective behavior. Tellurium in Organic Synthesis provides an overview of the principal aspects of organic tellurium chemistry. Many chapters have been enriched and updated in this second edition. New chapters include overviews of toxicology and pharmacology and a review on the preparation and reactivity of several tellurium heterocycles. The first part of the book focuses on the preparation of selected inorganic tellurium compounds and on the main classes of organ...
. Covers the literature in depth from 1982-1994, thus building on the original nine volumes . 14 volume set . 8750 pages approx . Volumes 1-9 provide a detailed account of the organic chemistry of both main group and transition elements . Volume 10 deals with compounds containing heteronuclear metal-metal bonds . Volume 11 describes the use of main group organometallic compounds in organic synthesis . Volume 12 is devoted to the use of transition metal orgnometallic compounds in organic synthesis . Volume 13 consists of a comprehensive index of all organometallic structures studied by diffraction methods . Volume 14 contains subject and formula indexes covering Volumes 1-12
The volumes in the series Organometallic Syntheses present clear, safe and reliable procedures for the preparation of important types of organometallic compounds. From Volume 3, the series is being published by Elsevier, and has also undergone some major changes. In light of the burgeoning of organometallic chemistry in the twenty years since the appearance of Volume 1 the editors decided to avail themselves of the rich experience of the organometallic community in the ongoing task of offering reliable preparative procedures. Therefore, with this volume, the series has been transformed from an authored work into an edited work. The editors reviewed the research literature for the last five years and sought to identify those types of organometallic compounds of greatest current interest in research. They then contacted those chemists most experienced with the synthesis and invited them to submit procedures for their synthesis. The proposals received were evaluated by the editors and those of greatest interest were selected for this volume.
None