The preparation and properties of pure divinyl ether
WL Ruigh, RT Major
Index: Ruigh; Major Journal of the American Chemical Society, 1931 , vol. 53, p. 2664,2670
Full Text: HTML
Citation Number: 39
Abstract
The first recorded reference to divinyl ether occurs in a paper by Semmlerl “On the Ethereal Oil of Allium Ursinum L.” The divinyl sulfide, which was obtained from the essential oil of this plant, when treated with silver oxide yielded a low-boiling, sulfur-free liquid, the boiling point of which was about 39'. Two determinations of the molecular weight corresponded with the calculated value for divinyl ether. Semmler did not further characterize this liquid.
Related Articles:
[Guilera, Jordi; Hankova, Libuse; Jerabek, Karel; Ramirez, Eliana; Tejero, Javier Reactive and Functional Polymers, 2014 , vol. 78, # 1 p. 14 - 22]
Upgrading of the acid-rich fraction of bio-oil by catalytic hydrogenation-esterification
[Onyestyak, Gyoergy; Harnos, Szabolcs; Klebert, Szilvia; Stolcova, Magdalena; Kaszonyi, Alexander; Kallo, Denes Applied Catalysis A: General, 2013 , vol. 464-465, p. 313 - 321]
[Park, Sehoon; Brookhart, Maurice Organometallics, 2010 , vol. 29, # 22 p. 6057 - 6064]
Self??Optimizing Continuous Reactions in Supercritical Carbon Dioxide
[Parrott, Andrew J.; Bourne, Richard A.; Akien, Geoffrey R.; Irvine, Derek J.; Poliakoff, Martyn Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 2011 , vol. 50, # 16 p. 3788 - 3792]