Advanced Practical Organic Chemistry, Second Edition


Book Description

The first edition of this book achieved considerable success due to its ease of use and practical approach, and to the clear writing style of the authors. The preparation of organic compounds is still central to many disciplines, from the most applied to the highly academic and, more tan ever is not limited to chemists. With an emphasis on the most up-to-date techniques commonly used in organic syntheses, this book draws on the extensive experience of the authors and their association with some of the world's mleading laboratories of synthetic organic chemistry. In this new edition, all the figures have been re-drawn to bring them up to the highest possible standard, and the text has been revised to bring it up to date. Written primarily for postgraduate, advanced undergraduate and industrial organic chemists, particularly those involved in pharmaceutical, agrochemical and other areas of fine chemical research, the book is also a source of reference for biochemists, biologists, genetic engineers, material scientists and polymer researchers.




Organic and inorganic practical chemistry


Book Description

This book is designed to cover the “Basics principles of practical chemistry” Syllabus of M.Sc, B.Sc level courses and This book embodies eight chapters which are of basic importance in the curriculum of M.Sc chemistry students and provide a core course of organic chemistry, B.Sc for all branches of sciences. Each chapter consists of a methodical introduction, discussion of basic physicochemical principles involved and practical application & significances.Chapter on Organic synthesis contains Preparation of m-Dinitrobenzene, m-Nitroaniline, Hippuric Acid, Azlactone, phthalimide, 2, 4-Dihydroxyacetophenone,Anthracene-Maleicanhydrideadduct Microwave Assisted Synthesis of Aspirin, P-Bromoacetanilide,P-Bromoaniline 2, 4, 6 Tribromoaniline; 1, 3, 5 Tribromobenzene, Aspirin, Tetrahydrocarbazole, 7-Hydroxy4-Methyl Coumarin (Umbelliferon) and Synthesis of Phenyl Indole, 7 Hydroxy-3-Methyl Flavone, 2, 5 Di hydroxy Acetophenone, 4-Chloro Toluene, Benzilic Acid, Benzpinacol, 7-Hydroxy Coumarin, Maleic Anhydride, Benzophenone, Benzanilide, Caprolactam, Vanillyl Alcohol, Ortho and Para Nitro Phenols, Acridone.In chapter two consists of Isolation of Natural product such as Isolation of Piperine from Black-pepper, Caffeine from Tea Leaves, and Cineole from Eucalyptus Leaves. Chapter three is “Drug synthesis” it mainly contains synthesis of Paracetamol, Phenytoin, Benzocaine, Methyl Uracil, chlorbutol, Sulphanilamide, flourescein, Antipyrine Chapter four is Organic mixture analysis explained the binary as well as ternary mixture and solid- solid, solid-liquid, liquid-liquid types of mixture. While chapter five consists of spectral analysis in which UV, visible, NMR, IR etc and different types of chromatographic techniques. In chapter six Estimation of Mg+2 in Soil, Carbonates & Bicarbonates in soil, Ca2+ & Fe3+ in cement sample, Calcium in a Given Tablet and Determination of Chemical Oxygen Demand, Sodium, Potassium, Calcium, Li, Phosphorous In Human Serum, Manganese in Steel, Quinine, by flame photometry; Determination of Riboflavin by Flourometry, Blood Cholesterol by Colorimetry, Blood Glucose Colorimetry chapter seven consist of Assay of Ibuprofen, Analgin, Ascorbic Acid, Sulfanilamide, Riboflavin and Diazepam the last chapter is the “Advanced Applied analysis &Preparations” it consists of Preparation of Urea- Formaldehyde Resin, phenol-formaldehyde resin and Determinations of Acid value of Oil, Viscosity of lubricating oil, Zn2+ ions by complexometric titration.




Advanced Practical Inorganic and Metalorganic Chemistry


Book Description

While the boundaries between the areas of chemistry traditionally labeled as inorganic, organic and physical are gradually diffusing, the practical techniques adopted by workers in each of these areas are often radically different. The breadth and variety of research classed as "inorganic chemistry" is readily apparent from an inspection of some of the leading international journals, and can be quite daunting for newcomers to this domain who are likely to have only limited experience of the methodologies involved. This book has therefore been written to provide guidance for those unfamiliar with the techniques most often encountered in synthetic inorganic / metalorganic chemistry, with an emphasis on procedures for handling air-sensitive compounds. One chapter is devoted to more specialized techniques such as metal vapor synthesis, and a review of preparative methods for a selection of starting materials is included as an aid to those planning research projects. While this book is aimed primarily at postgraduate and advanced undergraduate students involved in inorganic research projects, synthetic organic chemists and industrial chemists will also find much useful information within its pages. Similarly, it serves as a useful reference source for materials and polymer scientists who wish to take advantage of recent progress in precursor synthesis and catalyst development.




Practical Inorganic Chemistry


Book Description

In revising the text opportunity has been taken to introduce SI units throughout. An Appendix has been included which contains tables of SI units and a table of conversion factors for use when consulting data in non-SI units. Chapter 19 now includes experiments demon strating the use of ion-exchange and solid-liquid chromatography_ Exercises involving colorimetry have been included in Chapter 17. These techniques are introduced as part of a complementary exercise where their relevance is seen as part of a complete piece of work. Minor improvements have been made to some of the experimental procedures and we are grateful to those who have made helpful suggestions in this respect. G. PASS H. SUTCLIFFE iii Preface to the First Edition The student of inorganic chemistry is fortunate in having a wide choice of textbooks covering the descriptive and theoretical aspects of the sUbject. There is no comparable choice of textbooks covering practical inorganic chemistry. Moreover, there is a tendency for many students to draw an unfortunate distinction between chemistry taught in the lecture room, and laboratory work. Consideration of these points prompted the preparation of this book, in which we have attempted to emphasize the relationship between theory and practice.







Comprehensive Organic Chemistry Experiments for the Laboratory Classroom


Book Description

This expansive and practical textbook contains organic chemistry experiments for teaching in the laboratory at the undergraduate level covering a range of functional group transformations and key organic reactions.The editorial team have collected contributions from around the world and standardized them for publication. Each experiment will explore a modern chemistry scenario, such as: sustainable chemistry; application in the pharmaceutical industry; catalysis and material sciences, to name a few. All the experiments will be complemented with a set of questions to challenge the students and a section for the instructors, concerning the results obtained and advice on getting the best outcome from the experiment. A section covering practical aspects with tips and advice for the instructors, together with the results obtained in the laboratory by students, has been compiled for each experiment. Targeted at professors and lecturers in chemistry, this useful text will provide up to date experiments putting the science into context for the students.




Purification of Laboratory Chemicals


Book Description

Now in its fifth edition, the book has been updated to include more detailed descriptions of new or more commonly used techniques since the last edition as well as remove those that are no longer used, procedures which have been developed recently, ionization constants (pKa values) and also more detail about the trivial names of compounds.In addition to having two general chapters on purification procedures, this book provides details of the physical properties and purification procedures, taken from literature, of a very extensive number of organic, inorganic and biochemical compounds which are commercially available. This is the only complete source that covers the purification of laboratory chemicals that are commercially available in this manner and format.* Complete update of this valuable, well-known reference* Provides purification procedures of commercially available chemicals and biochemicals* Includes an extremely useful compilation of ionisation constants







Practical Organic Chemistry


Book Description

A Clear And Reliable Guide To Students Of Practical Organic Chemistry At The Undergraduate And Postgraduate Levels. This Edition S Special Emphasis Is On Semi Micro Methods And Modern Techniques And Reactions.




Essential Practical NMR for Organic Chemistry


Book Description

This book describes the use of NMR spectroscopy for dealing with problems of small organic molecule structural elucidation. It features a significant amount of vital chemical shift and coupling information but more importantly, it presents sound principles for the selection of the techniques relevant to the solving of particular types of problem, whilst stressing the importance of extracting the maximum available information from the simple 1-D proton experiment and of using this to plan subsequent experiments. Proton NMR is covered in detail, with a description of the fundamentals of the technique, the instrumentation and the data that it provides before going on to discuss optimal solvent selection and sample preparation. This is followed by a detailed study of each of the important classes of protons, breaking the spectrum up into regions (exchangeables, aromatics, heterocyclics, alkenes etc.). This is followed by consideration of the phenomena that we know can leave chemists struggling; chiral centres, restricted rotation, anisotropy, accidental equivalence, non-first-order spectra etc. Having explained the potential pitfalls that await the unwary, the book then goes on to devote chapters to the chemical techniques and the most useful instrumental ones that can be employed to combat them. A discussion is then presented on carbon-13 NMR, detailing its pros and cons and showing how it can be used in conjunction with proton NMR via the pivotal 2-D techniques (HSQC and HMBC) to yield vital structural information. Some of the more specialist techniques available are then discussed, i.e. flow NMR, solvent suppression, Magic Angle Spinning, etc. Other important nuclei are then discussed and useful data supplied. This is followed by a discussion of the neglected use of NMR as a tool for quantification and new techniques for this explained. The book then considers the safety aspects of NMR spectroscopy, reviewing NMR software for spectral prediction and data handling and concludes with a set of worked Q&As.