enolize
English
Alternative forms
- enolise
Verb
enolize (third-person singular simple present enolizes, present participle enolizing, simple past and past participle enolized)
- (organic chemistry, intransitive) To become an enol or enolate, often through isomerization.
- 1993, Richard O.C. Norman, James M. Coxon, Principles of Organic Synthesis, 3rd Edition, CRC Press (→ISBN), page 258
- As in base-catalyzed reactions, crossed reactions between two carbonyl compounds each of which can enolize are likely to result in a mixture of four products.
- 2000, Derek Horton, Advances in Carbohydrate Chemistry and Biochemistry, Gulf Professional Publishing (→ISBN), page 185
- These differences have been attributed to the ability of free saccharides to enolize in basic media and to the resistance of hydrazones to do so, as detailed next.
- 2005, Thomas Laue, Andreas Plagens, Named Organic Reactions, John Wiley & Sons (→ISBN), page 160
- The phosphorus tribromide is then formed in situ. Carboxylic acids that enolize easily will also react without a catalyst present.
- 2014, Penny Chaloner, Organic Chemistry: A Mechanistic Approach, CRC Press (→ISBN), page 798
- If we condense two species where one cannot enolize, then this principle reduces our number of primary products to two.
- 2016, Paul D. Boyer, Henry Lardy, Karl Myrbäck, Group Transfer Syntheses Coupled to ATP Cleavage, Elsevier (→ISBN), page 217
- Pyruvate is known to enolize rapidly under the conditions employed by Oshima and Tamiya; in contrast, the a-keto analogs of a number of other amino acids enolize at much slower rates.
- 1993, Richard O.C. Norman, James M. Coxon, Principles of Organic Synthesis, 3rd Edition, CRC Press (→ISBN), page 258
- (organic chemistry, transitive) To convert into an enol or enolate.
- 1999, Enzyme Kinetics and Mechanisms, Part E, Energetics of Enzyme Catalysis, Academic Press (→ISBN), page 23
- It was thus proposed that the matched pK values of the dienolate and of Tyr-14 permitted the hydrogen bond between them to become a very strong one, thus providing the energy to enolize the substrate and form the unstable intermediate.
- 1999, Enzyme Kinetics and Mechanisms, Part E, Energetics of Enzyme Catalysis, Academic Press (→ISBN), page 23
Derived terms
Translations
become an enol
|
convert into an enol
This article is issued from
Wiktionary.
The text is licensed under Creative
Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.