When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Aromatization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aromatization

    The process, which is catalyzed by platinum supported by aluminium oxide, is exemplified in the conversion methylcyclohexane (a naphthene) into toluene (an aromatic). [2] Dehydrocyclization converts paraffins (acyclic hydrocarbons) into aromatics. [3] A related aromatization process includes dehydroisomerization of methylcyclopentane to benzene:

  3. Cyclopentadiene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclopentadiene

    Cyclopentadiene is a highly reactive diene in the Diels–Alder reaction because minimal distortion of the diene is required to achieve the envelope geometry of the transition state compared to other dienes. [11] Famously, cyclopentadiene dimerizes. The conversion occurs in hours at room temperature, but the monomer can be stored for days at ...

  4. Dicyclopentadiene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dicyclopentadiene

    The spontaneous dimerization of neat cyclopentadiene at room temperature to form dicyclopentadiene proceeds to around 50% conversion over 24 hours and yields the endo isomer in better than 99:1 ratio as the kinetically favored product (about 150:1 endo:exo at 80 °C). [6] However, prolonged heating results in isomerization to the exo isomer.

  5. Isomerization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isomerization

    Skeletal isomerization occurs in the cracking process, used in the petrochemical industry to convert straight chain alkanes to isoparaffins as exemplified in the conversion of normal octane to 2,5-dimethylhexane (an "isoparaffin"): [4] Fuels containing branched hydrocarbons are favored for internal combustion engines for their higher octane ...

  6. Diels–Alder reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diels–Alder_reaction

    The reaction of cyclopentadiene and butenone for example is 700 times faster in water relative to 2,2,4-trimethylpentane as solvent. [14] Several explanations for this effect have been proposed, such as an increase in effective concentration due to hydrophobic packing [ 15 ] or hydrogen-bond stabilization of the transition state.

  7. Frontier molecular orbital theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frontier_molecular_orbital...

    In terms of the stereoselectivity of the reaction between maleic anhydride and cyclopentadiene, the endo-product is favored, a result best explained through FMO theory. The maleic anhydride is an electron-withdrawing species that makes the dieneophile electron deficient, forcing the regular Diels–Alder reaction.

  8. Sandmeyer reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandmeyer_reaction

    The Sandmeyer reaction provides a method through which one can perform unique transformations on benzene, such as halogenation, cyanation, trifluoromethylation, and hydroxylation. The reaction was discovered in 1884 by Swiss chemist Traugott Sandmeyer , when he attempted to synthesize phenylacetylene from benzenediazonium chloride and copper(I ...

  9. Pentadiene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentadiene

    In organic chemistry, pentadiene is any hydrocarbon with an open chain of five carbons, connected by two single bonds and two double bonds. All those compounds have the same molecular formula C 5 H 8. The inventory of pentadienes include: 1,2-pentadiene, or ethyl allene, H 2 C=C=CH−CH 2 −CH 3. [1]