What is it about?
Identification of a common intermediate in the formation of two products
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Why is it important?
Many reactions involve formation of two products from a single starting material. Let us say you can write a reaction mechanism which involves a common intermediate, and another one where there are no common intermediates. can you carry out an experiment which will distinguish these two possibilities ? If there is a step involving "H-X" bond breaking or forming, in the formation of one product and the other does not a possibility exists. We describe an experiment that was performed to identify such a branch point in the reaction path.
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This page is a summary of: The induced kinetic isotope effect as a tool for mechanistic discrimination, Journal of the Chemical Society Chemical Communications, January 1981, Royal Society of Chemistry,
DOI: 10.1039/c39810000354.
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