Synthetic Coordination and Organometallic Chemistry

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advanced coordination compound synthesis
Aqueous Alcohol Mixtures
Azomethinic Ligands
Binuclear Complexes
Binuclear Structures
Carbene Complexes
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Category=PNND
chelation chemistry
Coordination Bonds
Coordination Compounds
Copper Phthalocyanine
Direct Electrochemical Synthesis
electrosynthesis techniques
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Ferrocene Carboxaldehyde
HSAB Principle
Ligand Systems
ligand-metal interactions
Metal Carbonyls
Metal Free Phthalocyanine
Metal Phthalocyanines
microwave-assisted reactions
Modern Coordination Chemistry
NCS Group
organometallic synthesis methods
Pd II
polyhedral molecular design
Pyridine Substituent
Regioselective Synthesis
Template Synthesis
Transition Metal
Transition Metal Complexes
X-ray Diffraction
Xray Diffraction

Product details

  • ISBN 9780824708801
  • Weight: 1043g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Apr 2003
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This reference describes standard and nonstandard coordination modes of ligands in complexes, the intricacies of polyhedron-programmed and regioselective synthesis, and the controlled creation of coordination compounds such as molecular and hn-p-complexes, chelates, and homo- and hetero-nuclear compounds. It offers a clear and concise review of modern synthetic techniques of metal complexes as well as lesser known gas- and solid-phase synthesis, electrosynthesis, and microwave and ultrasonic treatment of the reaction system. The authors pay special attention to o-hydroxyazomethines and their S-, Se-containing analogues, b-diketones, and quinines, among others, and examine the immediate interaction of ligands and metal salts or carbonyls.

Alexander D. Garnovskii is Head of the Department of Coordination Compounds, Institute of Physical and Organic Chemistry, Rostov State University, Rostov-on-Don, Russia. The author or coauthor of more than 700 professional publications, including eight books, he holds 30 patents and is a member of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences. Professor Garnovskii received the Ph.D. (1961) and D.Hab. (1972) degrees from Rostov State University, Rostov-on-Don, Russia. Boris I. Kharisov is a Professor and Researcher at the Universidad Aut6noma de Nuevo Leon, Monterrey, Mexico. The author or coauthor of more than 50 professional publications, including two books, he holds two patents and is a member of the Mexican Chemical Society and the Mexican Academy of Sciences. Dr. Kharisov received the Ph.D. degree (1993) from Moscow State University, Russia.