Sinopsis
Localized chemical bonding may be defined as bonding in which the electrons are sharedby two and only two nuclei. Such bonding is the essential feature associated with the structure of organic molecules.1 Chapter 2 will discuss delocalized bonding, in which electrons are shared by more than two nuclei.
Content
- Localized Chemical Bonding
- Delocalized Chemical Bonding
- Bonding Weaker Than Covalent
- Stereochemistry and Conformation
- Carbocations, Carbanions, Free Radicals, Carbenes, and Nitrenes
- Mechanisms and Methods of Determining them
- Irradiation Processes in Organic Chemistry
- Acids and Bases
- Effects of Structure and Medium on Reactivity
- Aliphatic Substitution, Nucleophilic and Organometallic
- Aromatic Substitution, Electrophilic
- Aliphatic, Alkenyl, and Alkynyl Substitution, Electrophilic and Organometallic
- Aromatic Substitution: Nucleophilic and Organometallic
- Substitution Reactions: Radical
- Addition to Carbon–Carbon Multiple Bonds
- Addition to Carbon–Hetero Multiple Bonds
- Eliminations
- Rearrangements
- Oxidations and Reductions
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