Heck reaction
| Heck reaction | |
|---|---|
| Named after | Richard F. Heck | 
| Reaction type | Coupling reaction | 
| Identifiers | |
| Organic Chemistry Portal | heck-reaction | 
| RSC ontology ID | RXNO:0000024 | 
The Heck reaction (also called the Mizoroki–Heck reaction) is the chemical reaction of an unsaturated halide (or triflate) with an alkene in the presence of a base and a palladium catalyst to form a substituted alkene. It is named after Tsutomu Mizoroki and Richard F. Heck. Heck was awarded the 2010 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, which he shared with Ei-ichi Negishi and Akira Suzuki, for the discovery and development of this reaction. This reaction was the first example of a carbon-carbon bond-forming reaction that followed a Pd(0)/Pd(II) catalytic cycle, the same catalytic cycle that is seen in other Pd(0)-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions. The Heck reaction is a way to substitute alkenes.
| The Heck reaction | 
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