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# radical carbon - carbon bond formation
I need as much as you can on it as science direct is not throwing out anything useful
(, Mon 21 May 2007, 20:38, archived)
# Not really my field but
chemistry2.csudh.edu/rpendarvis/Radicals.html#polymer

There's this on free radical reactions, inc polymerisation
(, Mon 21 May 2007, 20:43, archived)
# cheers
it is just getting on top of me now
(, Mon 21 May 2007, 20:48, archived)
# Sorry,
but polymerisation was in the half
that got sacrificed for physics...

*edit* www.pslc.ws/mactest/radical.htm looks good too...
(, Mon 21 May 2007, 20:51, archived)
# I specialise in
polymer science, it is all the other radicals that are fucking me off :(
(, Mon 21 May 2007, 21:14, archived)
# oh, right.
sorry - ignore other post.

what about google scholar, that's great that is.

scholar.google.com/scholar?q=carbon-carbon+radical+bond+formation&hl=en&lr=&btnG=Search
(, Mon 21 May 2007, 21:19, archived)
# that is alright,
I was trying to find a review article, but I should be able to muddle through now , cheers to the pair of you
(, Mon 21 May 2007, 21:24, archived)
# Well
hope you can sort it out.

I've got to concentrate on "Modern Materials" and "Nanomagnetism"
(, Mon 21 May 2007, 21:25, archived)
# hmmm.
is it any help to mention vitamin b12?

that has a cobalt-carbon bond, that can break to form a carbon radical

www.chm.bris.ac.uk/motm/vitaminb12/mech.htm

which can attack a carbon atom.
(, Mon 21 May 2007, 21:17, archived)
# I have used that already
cheers, I am still at a lost to carbon carbon bond formation, but I think that alpha beta carbonyls are the answer
(, Mon 21 May 2007, 21:26, archived)
# probably are.
resonance compounds, too, probably.

(I just had to look up alpha/beta carbonyls - not my area :)
(, Mon 21 May 2007, 21:33, archived)
# not mine
it is awful stuff to put in a timed essay
(, Mon 21 May 2007, 21:42, archived)