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Multicomponent Reactions: Concepts and Applications for Design and Synthesis

ISBN: 978-1-118-86397-8

April 2015

528 pages

Description
Multicomponent reactions (MCRs) combine three or more reactants into a single chemical step to produce products that incorporate substantial portions of all the components. Naturally complying with many of the requirements for ideal organic syntheses, MCRs represent a pivotal step in modern chemistry’s development and have a long history with important named reactions. By virtue of their high productivity, MCRs have become a rapidly evolving field of research and attracted the attention of both academic and industrial scientists.

Addressing a dynamic area of organic chemistry, this book describes MCR synthetic strategies and applications – including key routes for synthesizing complex molecules. With the chemical community emphasizing green, sustainable, and efficient synthetic procedures to create complex molecules and libraries; this book serves as an important reference and resource for organic synthesis from bench to industrial scale research.

Bringing together otherwise-scattered information about a number of key and efficient chemical reactions, this book:

•    Illustrates the crucial role and the important utility of multicomponent reactions (MCRs) to organic syntheses
•    Compiles novel and efficient synthetic multicomponent procedures to give readers a complete picture of this class of organic reactions
•    Helps practicing chemists design efficient and practical transformations using multicomponent reaction strategies
•    Describes reaction background, applications to synthesize complex molecules and drugs, and reaction mechanisms
About the Author

Raquel P. Herrera, PhD, is Tenured Scientist of the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) at the ISQCH-University of Zaragoza. Her research interests are focused on asymmetric organocatalysis and its applications.

Eugenia Marqués-López, PhD, is an assistant professor at the University of Zaragoza. She performs her research on new catalytic methods, mainly based on asymmetric organocatalysis at the Institute of Chemical Synthesis and Homogeneous Catalysis (ISQCH-CSIC).