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Strategic Disconnections in Retrosynthetic Analysis from Pattern Recognition

An Applied Approach

  • 1st Edition - December 9, 2025
  • Latest edition
  • Author: Claudio Trombini
  • Language: English

Strategic Disconnections in Retrosynthetic Analysis from Pattern Recognition: An Applied Approach introduces retrosynthetic analysis through strategic disconnection methods. It pri… Read more

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Description

Strategic Disconnections in Retrosynthetic Analysis from Pattern Recognition: An Applied Approach introduces retrosynthetic analysis through strategic disconnection methods. It prioritizes disconnections of general structures characterized by specific functionalization patterns or structural motifs like stereogenic centers or bicyclic frameworks. Numerous examples from carefully selected literature illustrate each strategic disconnection, organized by functional or structural pattern, selected disconnection, and polar, radical, or concerted reaction pathways. Developing a deep understanding of these examples enhances 3D visualization skills, critical reasoning, and expertise in synthetic strategies.

The book offers insights into advancements in organic synthesis over the last 50 years, with cases of varying complexity from curated literature. Readers can focus on examples that align with their interests or lab work, each case referenced for easy access to primary information. It is ideal for graduate and postdoc students in organic chemistry and synthesis and researchers in industry. Advanced undergraduate students with a solid organic chemistry foundation may also find it beneficial.

Key features

  • Provides clear schematizations and organized teaching materials in well-structured chapters that are designed to aid students in the retention of information and its application to specific problems
  • Collects over a thousand examples drawn from the literature, explaining each single concept
  • Encourages students to handle molecules from a 3D stereochemical perspective and observe structural patterns that are often overlooked
  • Suggests alternative synthetic strategies

Readership

Graduate and postdoc students levels studying organic chemistry and organic synthesis, as well as researchers in industry involved in synthetic chemistry. Some of the general disconnection schemes may be understood by advanced undergraduate students pursuing their bachelor’s degree if they have a good foundation in general organic chemistry

Table of contents

1. Chemical synthesis as design and construction of molecular architectures: A brief history.

2. Organic Synthesis: Basic concepts, definitions, and classification of synthetic steps

3. Retrosynthetic Analysis, Glossary, and Operating Instructions directed to the synthesis of alkanes and of ether-type linkages

4. One-Group Disconnections: Target molecules containing one carbon-heteroatom bond

5. One-group disconnections: Target molecules containing one carbon-carbon multiple bond

6. Two-group disconnections: 1,3-Bifunctional compounds containing two carbon-heteroatom bonds (diones, aldols, etc.). FS = 3

7. Two-group disconnections: Bifunctional compounds containing two carbon-heteroatom bonds (diones, ketols, etc.) with FS = 2, 4, and 5

8. Two-group disconnections: Bifunctional compounds containing two carbon-carbon double or triple bonds (dienes, diynes, enynes)

9. Two-group disconnections: Target molecules containing one carbon-heteratom bond and one carbon-carbon multiple bond

10. Topology-guided retrosynthetic analysis

11. Ring-guided retrosynthetic analysis of cyclic compounds

12. Chirality-guided retrosynthetic analysis

13. One-pot multistep reactions

14. Organic Synthesis in the 21st Century: The new environment in which organic synthesis is expanding its reach

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Published: December 11, 2025
  • Language: English

About the author

CT

Claudio Trombini

Claudio Trombini was appointed a full professor at the University of Bologna in 1994; he currently serves as an Alma Mater Adjunct Professor at the University of Bologna, Italy and is a faculty member of the Erasmus Mundus MSc program in Chemical Innovation and Regulation. He is a fellow of the Academy of Sciences of the Institute of Bologna. He taught Organic Synthesis at the same University from 1979 to 2020, without interruption.

His scientific work has received awards from the Italian Chemical Society, including the Pino Medal (2013), and the GICO Senior Prize on organometallic chemistry (2012). He served on the Scientific Committees of the “A. Corbella Summer School on Organic Synthesis” (1996-1998), and the prestigious “Ischia Advanced School of Organic Chemistry” (2009-2018). Among various meetings, workshops, etc., he chaired the “III Italian-German Symposium on Organic Chemistry” in Ravenna in 2001”, the workshop “Perspective and Future Research in Malaria in 2015, and the “XXXVI National Meeting of the Division of Organic Chemistry of the Italian Chemical Society” in 2015.

In the last 15 years, he has been member of the International Advisory Board of CHEMCATCHEM, member of the management committee of COST Action CM905-Organocatalysis (ORCA), coordinator of a "great relevance bilateral project" with India and funded by the Italian Foreign Office entitled: Design and Synthesis of new antimalarial molecules. From 2010 he has been visiting professor at the Universities of Pune (India), Algarve (P), Freiburg (CH), and Barcelona (E).

His primary scientific interests are centred around methodology-oriented organic synthesis, exploiting organometallic catalysis and organocatalysis to develop new stereoselective transformations. He was actively engaged in function-oriented synthesis, wherein he designed and synthesized new biologically active molecules against the parasites causing malaria and Leishmaniasis. He has also developed new sensors for metals in environmental or biological contexts. Notable examples include studies of mercury speciation in environmental and biological samples, the synthesis of fluorescent ligands for detecting magnesium in cell compartments, and the development of thermochemiluminescent compounds that can be employed as nanoprobes in biosensors and binding bioassays.

Affiliations and expertise
Alma Mater Adjunct Professor, Department of Chemistry "Giacomo Ciamician", University of Bologna, Italy

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