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OverviewThis multi-volume handbook is the first to cover all questions concerning homogeneous hydrogenation. As such, it presents the catalysts, the scope of their application, mechanistic aspects, asymmetric methods, combinatorials catalysis, recycling methods and industrial examples. In 45 clearly structured chapters, the book includes all hydrogenation reactions catalyzed by soluble transition metal-based catalysts. All authors adopt an applied approach, emphasizing those aspects important for industrial use. With some 2,000 illustrations and 50 tables, this is a must-have for everyone working in the chemicals and pharmaceutical industries, as well as for graduate students in chemistry. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Johannes G. de Vries (DSM Research, Department of Fine Chemicals, The Netherlands) , Cornelis J. Elsevier (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)Publisher: Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH Imprint: Blackwell Verlag GmbH Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 9.70cm , Length: 24.40cm Weight: 3.438kg ISBN: 9783527311613ISBN 10: 3527311610 Pages: 1641 Publication Date: 03 November 2006 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsHistoric introduction and mechanism of homogeneous hydrogenation Hydrogenation kinetics Spectroscopic techniques in homogeneous hydrogenation Homogeneous hydrogenation of alkenes, alkynes and dienes Homogeneous hydrogenation of aldehydes, ketones, esters and anhydrides Aromatic and heteroaromatic hydrogenation Homogeneous hydrogenation of CO2 (Aromatic) Dehalogenation reactions Homogeneous polymer hydrogenation Transfer hydrogenation Diastereoselective hydrogenations Dehydrogenations of alkanes and alcohols Asymmetric olefin hydrogenation Asymmetric ketone and beta-ketoester hydrogenations (including mechanism) Asymmetric hydrogenation of alpha-ketoesters Asymmetric C=N hydrogenation Asymmetric transfer hydrogenation High throughput experimentation and ligand libraries Industrial applications Two-phase aqueous hydrogenations Homogeneous hydrogenations in neoteric solvents Immobilisation techniques Hydrogen activation in biological systems and model systems Transition metal catalysed regeneration of hydrogenase cofactors Catalyst deactivation Chemical engineering aspectsReviewsThe information is laid out well...clear diagrams...clear and comprehensive overview... (Platinum Metals Review, 2007) The information is laid out well ... clear diagrams ...clear and comprehensive overview... Platinum Metals Review The information is laid out well clear diagrams clear and comprehensive overview ( Platinum Metals Review, 2007) Author InformationKees Elsevier was born in 1957 in Den Haag, The Netherlands. He obtained his masters and PhD in chemistry at Utrecht University (1984) with Dr P. Vermeer and Professor H.J.T. Bos, on the topic of ""transition-metal mediated synthesis of chiral allenes"". Subsequently he moved to the University of Amsterdam, where he has developed his interests in organometallic chemistry and catalysis employing late-transition-metal compounds. He became associate professor in 1991, and then occupied the John van Geuns chair for developing transition-metal-NMR spectroscopy from 1995 till 1999. Since 1999 he holds the chair of Molecular Inorganic Chemistry at the University of Amsterdam. He has been visiting professor twice at the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, and at the Universities of Strasbourg and Toulouse (France). He is co-author of about 180 scientific papers on various topics in organometallic chemistry, homogeneous catalysis, and (transition metal) NMR spectroscopy, including contributions to several books. He has lately focused on Pd-catalyzed hydrogenations, involving N-ligands and N-heterocyclic carbenes, as well as catalysis involving aggregates (micelles and vesicles) of metallo-amphiphiles. He has supervised 20 PhD graduations. Kees serves on the advisory board of several scientific journals and he is scientific director of the Holland Research School of Molecular Chemistry. Hans de Vries was born in Amsterdam, the Netherlands (1951). In 1979 he received his Ph.D from the University of Groningen, were he worked under the guidance of Richard M. Kellogg on chiral, bridged dihydropyridines as NADH-mimetics. After a postdoctoral stint at Brandeis University, Waltham, USA with Jim Hendrickson (total synthesis of Methoxatin or PQQ) from 79-81 he moved back to Europe. From 1982-1988 he worked as medicinal chemist for Sandoz, first in Vienna, afterwards in London. Being more interested in chemistry than drugs he moved back to the Netherlands, were he took up employment with DSM, a multinational specialty chemicals company. His current job is Principal Scientist Homogeneous Catalysis for Fine Chemicals. Since 1998 he has been appointed as part-time professor at the University of Groningen. In 2000 he was appointed visiting industrial professor at the Univeristy of Bristol. During 2005 he was a visiting professor at the Universite Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg. His research interests are in the area of asymmetric hydrogenation (MonoPhos), aromatic substitution (""homeopathic"" palladium), hydroformylation, metathesis, combinations of enzymes with transition metal catalysis, HTS, combinatorial catalysis and process intensification. He is (co-)author of 20 patents and over 100 publications. He is married and has three children. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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