Fiesers' Reagents for Organic Synthesis provides an up-to-date, A-to-Z listing of reagents cited in synthetic literature.
? Covers, in volume 28, chemical literature and methodologies from July 2011 - December 2012
? Features entries with concise descriptions, illustrations of chemical reactions, selected examples of applications
? Includes author indexes and subject indexes
? Offers practical information on making/buying reagent, its usefulness, where to find complete details
Acclaim for previous volumes of Fiesers
"Essential for chemistry collections at the university and research levels."
-New York Public Library
"Highly recommended . . . lots of succinct, practical information on recent developments . . . in a format that is easy to use. The reagents are taken up in alphabetical order (common usage names, not CAS indexing codenames), sometimes several to a page, sometimes several pages to a reagent. One can expect to find how to make the reagent (in loose terms), or where it can be bought, what it is good for, and where to seek complete details. As with previous volumes, one can profit from just browsing, even if one does not feel a need to look up any particular subject. It is thus a secondary function of the book to help one keep abreast of the field, and it would be a rare chemist who would not learn something new and useful from a casual perusal of the pages."
-Journal of the American Chemical Society
This highly successful series has provided generations of professional chemists and students with a comprehensive, up-to-date examination of the reagent literature. Volume 28 surveys the most important synthetic methodologies published from July 2011 through December 2012. It continues to emphasize chiral catalysis and organocatalysis as well as catalytic reactions by derivatives of noble metals and reactions mediated by salts of copper, iron, and indium. Readers will also find extensive coverage of C-H bond activation by metal species.
Listed by common name, each entry features concise descriptions, illustrations of chemical reactions, examples of applications, and references for further investigation.
CONTENTS:
General abbreviations
Reference abbreviations
Reagents
Author index
Subject index