Chemical Forums
Chemistry Forums for Students => Organic Chemistry Forum => Organic Chemistry Forum for Graduate Students and Professionals => Topic started by: opsomath on June 21, 2013, 01:50:39 PM
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Has anyone here ever worked with nitrous oxide as an oxidizing agent or specifically as a source of oxygen in a reaction? I mean an organic transformation, not combustion (you people with NOS kits on your cars just hold it in).
I found one or two references to oxidation reactions which use a complicated transition metal catalyst, but surprisingly little seems to be out there (or else I am using wrong search terms)
http://books.google.com/books?id=tmfC2xNJMVoC&lpg=PA73&ots=Z9AzdYCrDD&dq=nitrous%20oxide%20in%20organic%20synthesis&pg=PA73#v=onepage&q=nitrous%20oxide%20in%20organic%20synthesis&f=false
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Is there a reason why you'd use it as opposed to more conventional reagents?
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Because I like thinking of new reactions that no one's done before...or rediscovering ones that have got some dust on them. Plus this stuff has nitrogen-nitrogen bonds and living dangerously is the soul of chemistry.
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Because I like thinking of new reactions that no one's done before...or rediscovering ones that have got some dust on them. Plus this stuff has nitrogen-nitrogen bonds and living dangerously is the soul of chemistry.
Good reasons! :)