Highly Alkylated Carborane Icosahedral [closo-B12H12]2− Derivatives (“Camouflaged Carboranes and Polyhedral Boranes”)
Author:
Hawthorne M. Frederick
Publisher
Springer New York
Reference5 articles.
1. Wei Jiang, Carolyn B. Knobler, Mark D. Mortimer, and M. Frederick Hawthorne, “A Camouflaged Icosahedral Carborane: Dodecamethyl-1,12-dicarba-closo-dodecarborane(12) and Related Compounds,” Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 34, 1332 (1995). 2. Axel Herzog, Andreas Maderna, George N. Harakas, Carolyn B. Knobler and M. Frederick Hawthorne, “A Camouflaged Nido-Carborane Anion: Facile Synthesis of Octa-B-methyl-1,2-dicarba-closo-dodecaborane(12) and Its Deboration Reaction,” Chem. Eur. J., 5, 1212 (1999). 3. Toralf Peymann, Carolyn B. Knobler, and M. Frederick Hawthorne, “An Icosahedral Array of Methyl Groups Supported by an Aromatic Borane Scaffold: The [closo-B12(CH3)12]2– Ion,” J. Am. Chem. Soc., 121, 5601 (1999). 4. Toralf Peymann, Carolyn B. Knobler, and M. Frederick Hawthorne, “An Unpaired Electron Incarcerated Within an Icosahedral Borane Cage: Synthesis and Crystal Structure of the Blue, Air-Stable {[closo-B12(CH3)12].}- Radical,” Chem. Comm., 2039 (1999). 5. Axel Herzog, Carolyn B. Knobler and M. Frederick Hawthorne, “Adaptation of the Barton Reaction to Carborane Chemistry: The Synthesis and Reactivity of 2-Hydroxyimino-1-hydroxymethylnona-B-methyl-1,12-dicarba-closo-dodecaborane(12),” Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 37, 1552 (1998).
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