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VI. Summary

  • Page ID
    23929
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    Elementary radical reactions readily occur in sequence because many of these reactions pro­duce new radicals ready for further reaction. Such reac­tions provide an opportunity for multiple struc­tural change under a single set of reaction conditions; consequently, these reactions, when pro­perly chosen, represent an increase in synthetic efficiency. Two-step sequential reactions often involve radical cyclization in combin­ation with radical addition, β-frag­mentation, or hydrogen-atom abstrac­tion. Three-step reactions usually consist of a combination of cycli­zation and β-frag­men­tation steps.


    This page titled VI. Summary is shared under a All Rights Reserved (used with permission) license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Roger W. Binkley and Edith R. Binkley.

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