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Henry Rzepa's Blog

Henry Rzepa's Blog
Chemistry with a twist
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DibromoethaneDyotropicIontriplePericyclicTutorial MaterialChemical Sciences
Published

In the previous post,  I discussed what we could learn from ethane by forcing it into a pericyclic dyotropic rearrangement. We saw how it voraciously scavenged two electrons from the  C-C bond to achieve this. What if we give it more electrons? Thus 1,2-dibromoethane undergoing the same reaction.

Chemical ITGeneralBohrBuryChemical BondingChemical Sciences
Published

In 1923, Coster and von Hevesy claimed discovery of the element Hafnium, atomic number 72 (latin Hafnia, meaning Copenhagen, where the authors worked) on the basis of six lines in its X-ray spectrum. The debate had long raged as to whether (undiscovered) element 72 belonged to the rare-earth group 3 of the periodic table below yttrium, or whether […]

GeneralInteresting ChemistryChiropticalMetallic CarbonNanotorusChemical Sciences
Published

The interface between physics, chemistry (and materials science) can be a fascinating one. Here I show a carbon nanotorus, devised by physicists a few years ago. It is a theoretical species, and was predicted to have a colossal paramagnetic moment.

Interesting ChemistryConformational AnalysisCoreyFormyl HydrogenJulia Contreras-GarciaChemical Sciences
Published

The title of this post paraphrases E. J. Corey’s article in 1997 (DOI: 10.1016/S0040-4039(96)02248-4) which probed the origins of conformation restriction in aldehydes. The proposal was of (then) unusual hydrogen bonding between the O=C-H…F-B groups.