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Synthetic Organic Chemistry
Wöhler synthesized urea, the first organic compound to be made from inorganic materials, in 1828. Since then the study of organic chemistry has progressed dramatically and thousands of useful organic compounds have been synthesized using various novel reactions, catalysts, reagents, and synthetic methodologies. Furthermore, efforts have been made to realize environmentally friendly organic synthesis, i.e., green chemistry, and so the use of polymer supported reagents, fluorous solvents or ionic liquids have been studied. In this section you will find lists of our reagents for various purposes including: polymer supported reagents, oxidation, reduction, condensation, protection, and homogeneous metal complex catalysts, etc.
- Environmentally-friendly Oxidation
- Ionic Liquids
- Fluorous Chemistry
- Amphiphilic Polymer-assembled Pd Complex Catalyst
- Stable Lewis Acids in Aqueous Media
- Polymer-Supported Reagents
- Asymmetric Organocatalysts
- Asymmetric Synthesis
- Chiral Building Blocks
- Optical Resolution
- Fluorinating Reagents, Building Blocks & Fluorinated Bioactive Compounds
- Halogenation
- New Oxidation of primary & secondary Alcohols
- Oxidation Agents
- Reducing Agents
- Mitsunobu Reaction
- Condensation & Active Esterification
- Glycosylation
- Phosphorylation
- Amination
- Wittig & Horner-Emmons Reaction
- Titanium-mediated Carbonyl Olefination
- Suzuki-Miyaura Cross-coupling
- Iron-Catalyzed Oraganic Synthesis
- Metal Catalysts for Organic Synthesis
- Grignard Reagents & Alkyl Metals
- Protection & Derivatization Reagents (for Synthesis)
- Silicon Compounds (for Synthesis)
- Sulfur Compounds (for Synthesis)
- Phosphines
- Hypervalent Iodine Compounds
- Phase-Transfer Catalysts
- Combinatorial Chemistry
- Gas Cylinders
- Precursors for Preparation of Highly Reactive Reagents












