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  2. Sodium borohydride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_borohydride

    Sodium borohydride is soluble in protic solvents such as water and lower alcohols. It also reacts with these protic solvents to produce H 2; however, these reactions are fairly slow. Complete decomposition of a methanol solution requires nearly 90 min at 20 °C. [11] It decomposes in neutral or acidic aqueous solutions, but is stable at pH 14. [9]

  3. Sodium cyanoborohydride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_cyanoborohydride

    Since sodium cyanoborohydride is a mild reducing agent, it gives good chemoselectivity for reaction with certain functional groups in the presence of others. For example, sodium cyanoborohydride is generally incapable of reducing amides, ethers, esters and lactones, nitriles, or epoxides. [8]

  4. Solubility chart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solubility_chart

    The following chart shows the solubility of various ionic compounds in water at 1 atm pressure and room temperature (approx. 25 °C, 298.15 K). "Soluble" means the ionic compound doesn't precipitate, while "slightly soluble" and "insoluble" mean that a solid will precipitate; "slightly soluble" compounds like calcium sulfate may require heat to precipitate.

  5. Borohydride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borohydride

    Ball-and-stick model of the tetrahydroborate anion, [BH 4] −. Borohydride refers to the anion [B H 4] −, which is also called tetrahydridoborate, and its salts. [1] Borohydride or hydroborate is also the term used for compounds containing [BH 4−n X n] −, where n is an integer from 0 to 3, for example cyanoborohydride or cyanotrihydroborate [BH 3 (CN)] − and triethylborohydride or ...

  6. Sodium triacetoxyborohydride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_triacetoxyborohydride

    The combination of Na[BH 4] with carboxylic acids results in the formation of acyloxyborohydride species other than sodium triacetoxyborohydride. These modified species can perform a variety of reductions not normally associated with borohydride chemistry, such as alcohols to hydrocarbons and nitriles to primary amines.

  7. Solubility table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solubility_table

    The tables below provides information on the variation of solubility of different substances (mostly inorganic compounds) in water with temperature, at one atmosphere pressure. Units of solubility are given in grams of substance per 100 millilitres of water (g/100 ml), unless shown otherwise. The substances are listed in alphabetical order.

  8. Reductive amination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reductive_amination

    At low pH values, it efficiently reduces aldehydes and ketones. [7] As the pH increases, the reduction rate slows and instead, the imine intermediate becomes preferential for reduction. [ 7 ] For this reason, NaBH 3 CN is an ideal reducing agent for one-pot direct reductive amination reactions that don't isolate the intermediate imine.

  9. Nitrile reduction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrile_reduction

    Useful reagents for this reaction include formic acid with a hydrogenation catalysis [12] or metal hydrides, which are used to add one mol of hydrogen to the nitrile. For example, sodium borohydride reduces nitriles in alcoholic solvents with a CoCl 2 catalyst or Raney nickel .