Rebecca L.
Melen
a and
Douglas W.
Stephan
b
aSchool of Chemistry, Cardiff University, Main Building, Cardiff, CF10 3AT, Cymru/Wales, UK. E-mail: MelenR@cardiff.ac.uk
bDepartment of Chemistry, University of Toronto, 80 St. George Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 3H6. E-mail: dstephan@chem.utoronto.ca
In recent years, a diverse array of developments and applications of main group compounds and materials have emerged in fields ranging from catalysis to molecular electronics. In quintessential examples of the scientific method, these advances have evolved from a fundamental understanding of the chemistry of low oxidation state and/or low coordinate compounds, Lewis-acid/Lewis-base reactivity, main group heterocycles, free radicals and bonding in main group compounds. The increasing focus on chemical transformations and thus the utility of main group species can be traced to several key findings over the past two decades. Certainly the studies by Power that illustrated that heavier main group elements behave like transition metals was a crucial realisation in small molecule activation. Similarly, the seminal work of Piers on borane mediated hydrosilylation, a decade before the articulation of the concept of frustrated Lewis pair chemistry, foreshadowed the broader emergence of main group species in catalysis.
This themed issue on main group transformations comprises a collection of contributions from some of the leading researchers covering both fundamental and applications-driven research. Included in the volume is a perspective article in addition to several communications and a series of full articles. These manuscripts cover a broad range of chemistry demonstrating a diversity of chemical transformations of main group compounds involving group II to group VI derivatives. Collectively these papers illustrate a broad range of developments and applications of the chemistry of s- and p-block illustrating new strategies to stabilise unusual main group derivatives, new reactivity and offering a new understanding. Other works report the utility of main group species in the activation of small molecules, stoichiometric transformations and catalysis while other contributions are aimed at applications in materials chemistry.
The diverse contributions in this themed issue are further evidence of the renaissance of main group chemistry that is currently on-going. From this breadth of chemistry, it is clear that this field is rapidly evolving and leading to innovation. Clearly it is an exciting time to be a main group chemist!
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