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Wittig reagents are usually described as a combination of two resonance structures: Ph 3 P + CR 2 − ↔ Ph 3 P=CR 2. The former is called the ylide form and the latter is called the phosphorane form, which is the more familiar representation. Crystallographic characterization of methylenetriphenylphosphorane shows that the phosphorus atom is ...
Crystallographic characterization of the colourless ylide reveals that the phosphorus atom is approximately tetrahedral. The PCH 2 centre is planar and the P=CH 2 distance is 1.661 Å, which is much shorter than the P-Ph distances (1.823 Å). [5] The compound is usually described as a combination of two resonance structures: Ph 3 P + CH 2 − ...
Carbomethoxymethylenetriphenylphosphorane Names Preferred IUPAC name. Methyl (triphenyl- ...
Contributing structures of the carbonate ion. In chemistry, resonance, also called mesomerism, is a way of describing bonding in certain molecules or polyatomic ions by the combination of several contributing structures (or forms, [1] also variously known as resonance structures or canonical structures) into a resonance hybrid (or hybrid structure) in valence bond theory.
Clar's rule states that for a benzenoid polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (i.e. one with only hexagonal rings), the resonance structure with the largest number of disjoint aromatic π-sextets is the most important to characterize its chemical and physical properties. Such a resonance structure is called a Clar structure. In other words, a ...
This bonding scheme is succinctly summarized by the following two resonance structures: I—I···I − ↔ I − ···I—I (where "—" represents a single bond and "···" represents a "dummy bond" with formal bond order 0 whose purpose is only to indicate connectivity), which when averaged reproduces the I—I bond order of 0.5 obtained ...
The insertion of a o-or p-phenylene (i.e., a benzene ring in the 1,2- or 1,4-orientation) also results in some similarities in reactivity (called "phenylogy"), although the effect is generally weaker, as conjugation through the aryl ring requires consideration of resonance forms or intermediates in which aromaticity is disrupted. [3] [4]