chemoselectivityrl
Chemoselectivityrl is a concept within the field of chemistry that refers to the preferential reaction of a reagent with one functional group in a molecule when other, chemically similar functional groups are also present. This selectivity is crucial in organic synthesis, where chemists often need to modify a specific part of a complex molecule without affecting other reactive sites. For example, if a molecule contains both an aldehyde and a ketone, a chemoselective reducing agent would be able to reduce only the aldehyde to an alcohol, leaving the ketone untouched.
Achieving chemoselectivity often relies on the inherent differences in reactivity between functional groups under specific reaction
The concept of chemoselectivity is distinct from other types of selectivity in chemistry, such as regioselectivity