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  2. Grignard reagent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grignard_reagent

    Grignard reagents or Grignard compounds are chemical compounds with the general formula R−Mg−X, where X is a halogen and R is an organic group, normally an alkyl or aryl. Two typical examples are methylmagnesium chloride Cl−Mg−CH 3 and phenylmagnesium bromide (C 6 H 5)−Mg−Br. They are a subclass of the organomagnesium compounds.

  3. Schlenk equilibrium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schlenk_equilibrium

    The process described is an equilibrium between two equivalents of an alkyl or aryl magnesium halide on the left of the equation and one equivalent each of the dialkyl or diaryl magnesium compound and magnesium halide salt on the right. Organomagnesium halides in solution also form dimers and higher oligomers, especially at high concentration ...

  4. Grignard reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grignard_reaction

    A solution of a carbonyl compound is added to a Grignard reagent. (See gallery) An example of a Grignard reaction (R 2 or R 3 could be hydrogen). The Grignard reaction (French:) is an organometallic chemical reaction in which, according to the classical definition, carbon alkyl, allyl, vinyl, or aryl magnesium halides (Grignard reagent) are added to the carbonyl groups of either an aldehyde or ...

  5. Bouveault aldehyde synthesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bouveault_aldehyde_synthesis

    The Bouveault aldehyde synthesis (also known as the Bouveault reaction) is a one-pot substitution reaction that replaces an alkyl or aryl halide with a formyl group using a N,N-disubstituted formamide. [1] [2] For primary alkyl halides this produces the homologous aldehyde one carbon longer. For aryl halides this produces the corresponding ...

  6. Kulinkovich reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kulinkovich_reaction

    The Kulinkovich reaction describes the organic synthesis of substituted cyclopropanols through reaction of esters with dialkyl­dialkoxy­titanium reagents, which are generated in situ from Grignard reagents containing a hydrogen in beta-position and titanium(IV) alkoxides such as titanium isopropoxide. [1]

  7. Isopropylmagnesium chloride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isopropylmagnesium_chloride

    Solutions of isopropylmagnesium chloride by treating isopropyl chloride with magnesium metal in refluxing ether: [1] (CH 3) 2 HCCl + Mg → (CH 3) 2 HCMgCl. This reagent is used to prepare other Grignard reagents by transmetalation. [2] An illustrative reaction involves the generation of the Grignard reagent derived from bromo-3,5-bis ...

  8. Metal–halogen exchange - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metal–halogen_exchange

    Grignard reagents can be prepared by treating a preformed Grignard reagent with an organic halide. This method offers the advantage that the Mg transfer tolerates many functional groups. A typical reaction involves isopropylmagnesium chloride and aryl bromide or iodides: [10] i-PrMgCl + ArCl → i-PrCl + ArMgCl

  9. Methylmagnesium chloride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methylmagnesium_chloride

    As with most Grignard reagents, methylmagnesium chloride is highly solvated by ether solvents via coordination from two oxygen atoms to give a tetrahedrally bonded magnesium center. Like methyllithium, it is the synthetic equivalent to the methyl carbanion synthon. It reacts with water and other protic reagents to give methane, e.g.,: