Solid-Phase Organic Synthesis Edited by Kevin Burgess, Texas A & M University Efficient, high-throughput chemistry is now the focus of many research laboratories. Solid-phase organic syntheses are central to many of these combinatorial and parallel screening methodologies. Consequently, they have been a major scientific theme of the 1990s and promise to remain prominent for the first part of the new millennium. Indeed, a bewildering number of papers have entered the literature on this topic; some report minor modifications enabling transformation of solution-phase methods to a solid support, while others report major innovations. Solid-Phase Organic Synthesis collects, highlights, and critiques some of the key developments in the field. Leading practitioners explain different perspectives on diverse aspects of the area. Specific topics covered include:
* Syntheses of guanidines
* Palladium-catalyzed C-C bond forming reactions
* S_nAr reactions for the formation of heterocycles
* Sequence-specific arylalkyne oligomers
* Resin-supported capture agents and other reagents
* Synthesis on pins
* Monitoring of supported reactions using IR
* Solid-phase syntheses of natural product derivatives
Of related interest . Combinatorial Chemistry and Molecular Diversity in Drug Discovery Eric M. Gordon and James F. Kerwin 1998 (0-471-15518-7) 544 pp. Combinatorial Chemistry Synthesis and Application Stephen R. Wilson and Anthony W. Czarnik 1997 (0-471-12687-X) 288 pp.
Solid-Phase Organic Synthesis
R3725,07
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ISBN | 9780471458456 |
Number Of Pages | 296 |
File Size | 12.37 mb |
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Edition | 1 |
Published | 05-04-2004 |