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Frontispiece: Iron‐Catalyzed Olefin Metathesis: Recent Theoretical and Experimental Advances
Olefin metathesis gives access to important petrochemicals, polymers, and pharmaceuticals. The catalysts for these transformations are often based on high‐valent metal ions e.g., Ru(IV), which have been improved through ligand modifications. An attractive, but challenging goal is to catalyze olefin...
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Published in: | Chemistry : a European journal 2022-11, Vol.28 (62), p.n/a |
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container_title | Chemistry : a European journal |
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creator | Grau, Benedikt W. Neuhauser, Alexander Aghazada, Sadig Meyer, Karsten Tsogoeva, Svetlana B. |
description | Olefin metathesis gives access to important petrochemicals, polymers, and pharmaceuticals. The catalysts for these transformations are often based on high‐valent metal ions e.g., Ru(IV), which have been improved through ligand modifications. An attractive, but challenging goal is to catalyze olefin metathesis with a non‐toxic, bio‐compatible, and abundant element; namely, iron. Indeed, the first pieces of evidence suggest that low‐valent Fe(II) complexes are active in olefin metathesis. This Review by K. Meyer, S. B. Tsogoeva, et al. (DOI: 10.1002/chem.202201414) summarizes the key advances and challenges in this endeavor. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1002/chem.202286261 |
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subjects | Biocompatibility Catalysts Chemistry Iron iron catalysis ligands Metal ions Metathesis metathesis catalysts olefin metathesis olefins Petrochemicals Polymers |
title | Frontispiece: Iron‐Catalyzed Olefin Metathesis: Recent Theoretical and Experimental Advances |
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