Fulvenes
Fulvenes are the class of hydrocarbon obtained by formally cross-conjugating one ring and methylidene through a common exocyclic double bond.[1][2]
The name is derived from the fulvene. which has one pentagonal ring. Pentafulvene is also called simply fulvene, the parent structure of this class.
Fulvenes are isomer of annulene.
See also
- Methylenecyclopropene (Triafulvene)
- Fulvene (Pentafulvene)
- Heptafulvene
- Fulvalenes
References
- ↑ Agranat, Israel (2012), "Ground-State Versus Excited-State Polarity of Triafulvenes: A Study of Solvent Effects on Molecular Electronic Spectra", The Jerusalem Symposia on Quantum Chemistry and Biochemistry, 8: 573–583, doi:10.1007/978-94-010-1837-1_36
- ↑ Neuenschwander, Markus (1986), "Synthetic and NMR spectroscopic investigations of fulvenes and fulvalenes" (PDF), Pure&AppI. Chem., 58 (1): 55–66
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