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Glenn M. Sammis

Researcher at University of British Columbia

Publications -  62
Citations -  2201

Glenn M. Sammis is an academic researcher from University of British Columbia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catalysis & Nucleophile. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 57 publications receiving 1836 citations. Previous affiliations of Glenn M. Sammis include Harvard University & Princeton University.

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Construction of carbo- and heterocycles using radical relay cyclizations initiated by alkoxy radicals.

TL;DR: An efficient method for the rapid construction of carbo- and heterocycles has been developed using radical relay cyclizations initiated by alkoxy radicals, utilized as a key step in the synthesis of the tetrahydrofuran fragment in (-)-amphidinolide K.
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Ring-opening reactions of oxabicyclic alkene compounds: enantioselective hydride and ethyl additions catalyzed by group 4 metals

TL;DR: Titanium and zirconium catalysts selectively catalyze either the ethyl or hydride addition to [2.2.1] 4, 5-bis(methoxymethyl)-7-oxabicycloheptene (6); the ring-opened products formed depend on catalyst, temperature, alkylaluminum reagent, and the concentration of alkyalaluminum.
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The Emerging Applications of Sulfur(VI) Fluorides in Catalysis.

TL;DR: The past decade has witnessed remarkable growth of catalytic transformations in organic sulfur(VI) fluoride chemistry as mentioned in this paper, focusing exclusively on foundational examples that utilize catalytic strategies to synthesize and react S (VI) fluorides.
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Xenon Difluoride Mediated Fluorodecarboxylations for the Syntheses of Di- and Trifluoromethoxyarenes

TL;DR: XeF2 is demonstrated to be a more proficient fluorine-transfer reagent than either NFSI or Selectfluor in fluorodecarboxylations of both mono- and difluoroaryloxy acetic acid derivatives in good to excellent yields.
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One-pot fluorosulfurylation of Grignard reagents using sulfuryl fluoride

TL;DR: This method is applicable for in situ sequential reactions, whereby the Grignard reagent can be converted to the corresponding diarylsulfone, sulfonate ester, or sulfonamide in a one-pot process.