named reaction in organic chemistry

C23798
concept

A named reaction in organic chemistry is a specific, well-characterized chemical transformation between organic molecules that is widely recognized and referred to by the name of its discoverer(s) or originator(s).

All labels observed (14)

Label Occurrences
named reaction 9
named reaction in organic chemistry canonical 4
name reaction 3

Description generation (CDg)

The one-sentence description above was generated by prompting gpt-5.1 with the class name and this instruction.

Instruction
generate a one-sentence description for a given conceptual class.
# Response Format
Return only the sentence: "Description: [one-sentence description of the conceptional class]"
Input
Class: named reaction in organic chemistry
Generated description
A named reaction in organic chemistry is a specific, well-characterized chemical transformation between organic molecules that is widely recognized and referred to by the name of its discoverer(s) or originator(s).

Instances (23)

Instance Via concept surface
Shi epoxidation organocatalytic reaction
Zinin reduction
Sharpless epoxidation
Sharpless asymmetric dihydroxylation asymmetric catalytic reaction
Sharpless aminohydroxylation named reaction
Suzuki coupling palladium-catalyzed reaction
Buchwald–Hartwig amination palladium-catalyzed reaction
Barton–McCombie deoxygenation name reaction
Eschenmoser–Claisen rearrangement Claisen rearrangement variant
Eschenmoser–Tanabe fragmentation named reaction
Eschenmoser sulfide contraction named reaction
Trost asymmetric allylic alkylation palladium-catalyzed reaction
Corey–Bakshi–Shibata reduction asymmetric reduction reaction
Corey–Kim oxidation
Corey–Winter olefin synthesis named reaction
Corey–Nicolaou macrolactonization named reaction
Robinson annulation reaction name reaction
Norrish reaction organic chemistry reaction
Evans aldol reaction stereoselective reaction
Stork enamine reaction named reaction
Stork–Danheiser rearrangement named reaction
Bechamp reduction named organic reaction
Overman rearrangement named reaction