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Boron-based compounds have been utilized as ligands within transition metal complexes for many decades. The diversity of such compounds in terms of varying functional groups is truly exceptional. Boron compounds are of high interest due to the great potential to modify the substituents around the boron center and to produce a broad range of structural motifs. The many different ways these compounds can coordinate or interact with transition metal centers is astonishing. Examples of transition metal complexes containing boron-based ligands include scorpionates, cluster-type borane- and carboranes, borates, and phosphine-stabilized borylene ligands. This Special Issue brings together a collection of articles focusing on recent developments in the aforementioned boron-based ligands. The articles reported in this book will provide the reader with an overview of the types of boron-based ligands which are currently being researched in groups around the world.
dodecaborate(6?) --- pincer --- hexanuclear compounds --- aggregation --- germanium --- ligand --- iridium --- ruthenium --- polyborate --- metallaborane --- boron-containing heterocycles --- soft scorpionate --- borohydride --- copper --- sulfur --- carborane --- zinc --- nido-carborane --- iron bis(dicarbollide) --- synthesis --- antimony --- borinane --- oxidoborate --- metallacarborane --- UV-Vis spectroscopy --- thiolato ligand --- dimethyloxonium derivatives --- scorpionate --- carboranylamidinate --- carbodiphosphorane --- self-assembly --- zinc(II) complex --- crystal structure --- cobalt bis(dicarbollide) --- NTA --- boron --- X-ray structure --- methoxy derivatives --- properties --- hexaborate(2?)
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This Special Issue on carboranes is dedicated to Prof. Alan Welch on the occasion of his retirement and his outstanding contributions to the field of carborane chemistry. Polyhedral carboranes lie at the interface of organic and inorganic chemistry. One of their most attractive and important features is the variety and beauty of their chemical structures. They have found applications as diverse as catalysis, in Boron Neutron Capture Therapy, as liquid crystals and as semiconductors. This Special Issue illustrates the very comprehensive world of heteroborane chemistry, from liquid crystals to BNCT agents, di-halogen bonding to quantum chemical calculations of tetrel complexes of the carbonium ylide CB11H11, nickellacarboranes as potential acid–base sensors to revealing how the selective formations of metallacarborane diastereomers can arise and metallacarboranes as function as radical cation salts with dielectric or semiconductor properties.
Research & information: general --- carboranes --- DFT --- reaction pathways --- boron chemistry --- o-carborane --- sulfa-Michael addition reaction --- cysteine --- boron neutron capture therapy --- o-carborane decapitation --- labeled compound --- 1,1′-bis(o-carborane) --- deboronation --- metalation --- bis(nickelation) --- diastereoisomers --- stereospecific --- boron clusters --- liquid crystals --- fluorescence --- cholesterol --- nido-carborane --- nitrilium derivatives --- nickel(II) half-sandwich complexes --- synthesis --- structure --- Lewis acid --- carborane --- carbonium ylide --- tetrel bond --- quantum chemistry --- electron density --- ELF --- iodo derivatives --- dihalogen bond --- X-ray structure --- quantum chemical calculations --- iron bis(1,2-dicarbollide) --- chromium bis(1,2-dicarbollide) --- tetramethyltetrathiafulvalene --- tetramethyltetraselenafulvalene --- radical-cation salts --- crystal and molecular structure --- electric conductivity --- n/a --- 1,1'-bis(o-carborane)
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This Special Issue on carboranes is dedicated to Prof. Alan Welch on the occasion of his retirement and his outstanding contributions to the field of carborane chemistry. Polyhedral carboranes lie at the interface of organic and inorganic chemistry. One of their most attractive and important features is the variety and beauty of their chemical structures. They have found applications as diverse as catalysis, in Boron Neutron Capture Therapy, as liquid crystals and as semiconductors. This Special Issue illustrates the very comprehensive world of heteroborane chemistry, from liquid crystals to BNCT agents, di-halogen bonding to quantum chemical calculations of tetrel complexes of the carbonium ylide CB11H11, nickellacarboranes as potential acid–base sensors to revealing how the selective formations of metallacarborane diastereomers can arise and metallacarboranes as function as radical cation salts with dielectric or semiconductor properties.
carboranes --- DFT --- reaction pathways --- boron chemistry --- o-carborane --- sulfa-Michael addition reaction --- cysteine --- boron neutron capture therapy --- o-carborane decapitation --- labeled compound --- 1,1′-bis(o-carborane) --- deboronation --- metalation --- bis(nickelation) --- diastereoisomers --- stereospecific --- boron clusters --- liquid crystals --- fluorescence --- cholesterol --- nido-carborane --- nitrilium derivatives --- nickel(II) half-sandwich complexes --- synthesis --- structure --- Lewis acid --- carborane --- carbonium ylide --- tetrel bond --- quantum chemistry --- electron density --- ELF --- iodo derivatives --- dihalogen bond --- X-ray structure --- quantum chemical calculations --- iron bis(1,2-dicarbollide) --- chromium bis(1,2-dicarbollide) --- tetramethyltetrathiafulvalene --- tetramethyltetraselenafulvalene --- radical-cation salts --- crystal and molecular structure --- electric conductivity --- n/a --- 1,1'-bis(o-carborane)
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This Special Issue on carboranes is dedicated to Prof. Alan Welch on the occasion of his retirement and his outstanding contributions to the field of carborane chemistry. Polyhedral carboranes lie at the interface of organic and inorganic chemistry. One of their most attractive and important features is the variety and beauty of their chemical structures. They have found applications as diverse as catalysis, in Boron Neutron Capture Therapy, as liquid crystals and as semiconductors. This Special Issue illustrates the very comprehensive world of heteroborane chemistry, from liquid crystals to BNCT agents, di-halogen bonding to quantum chemical calculations of tetrel complexes of the carbonium ylide CB11H11, nickellacarboranes as potential acid–base sensors to revealing how the selective formations of metallacarborane diastereomers can arise and metallacarboranes as function as radical cation salts with dielectric or semiconductor properties.
Research & information: general --- carboranes --- DFT --- reaction pathways --- boron chemistry --- o-carborane --- sulfa-Michael addition reaction --- cysteine --- boron neutron capture therapy --- o-carborane decapitation --- labeled compound --- 1,1'-bis(o-carborane) --- deboronation --- metalation --- bis(nickelation) --- diastereoisomers --- stereospecific --- boron clusters --- liquid crystals --- fluorescence --- cholesterol --- nido-carborane --- nitrilium derivatives --- nickel(II) half-sandwich complexes --- synthesis --- structure --- Lewis acid --- carborane --- carbonium ylide --- tetrel bond --- quantum chemistry --- electron density --- ELF --- iodo derivatives --- dihalogen bond --- X-ray structure --- quantum chemical calculations --- iron bis(1,2-dicarbollide) --- chromium bis(1,2-dicarbollide) --- tetramethyltetrathiafulvalene --- tetramethyltetraselenafulvalene --- radical-cation salts --- crystal and molecular structure --- electric conductivity --- carboranes --- DFT --- reaction pathways --- boron chemistry --- o-carborane --- sulfa-Michael addition reaction --- cysteine --- boron neutron capture therapy --- o-carborane decapitation --- labeled compound --- 1,1'-bis(o-carborane) --- deboronation --- metalation --- bis(nickelation) --- diastereoisomers --- stereospecific --- boron clusters --- liquid crystals --- fluorescence --- cholesterol --- nido-carborane --- nitrilium derivatives --- nickel(II) half-sandwich complexes --- synthesis --- structure --- Lewis acid --- carborane --- carbonium ylide --- tetrel bond --- quantum chemistry --- electron density --- ELF --- iodo derivatives --- dihalogen bond --- X-ray structure --- quantum chemical calculations --- iron bis(1,2-dicarbollide) --- chromium bis(1,2-dicarbollide) --- tetramethyltetrathiafulvalene --- tetramethyltetraselenafulvalene --- radical-cation salts --- crystal and molecular structure --- electric conductivity
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