Živojin Jocić (1870–1914) was a Serbian chemist.
In organic chemistry, the Jocic reaction, also called the Jocic–Reeve reaction (named after Żivojin Jocić[1] and Wilkins Reeve)[2] is a name reaction that involves nucleophilic displacement of the hydroxyl group in a 1,1,1-trichloro-2-hydroxyalkyl structure with concomitant conversion of the trichloromethyl portion to a carboxylic acid or similar functional group.
At the turn of the century, Živojin Jocić worked as an assistant at the University of Petrograd in Imperial Russia. In a relatively short time – between 1897 and 1911 – he published a large number of papers in organic chemistry, for the most part dealing with the synthesis of acetylene hydrocarbons and synthesis by means of Grignard reagent.
See also
- Jocic reaction
- Sima Lozanić
- Marko Leko
- Mihailo Rašković
- Aleksandar M. Leko
- Milivoje Lozanić
- Dejan Popović Jekić
- Panta Tutundžić
- Vukić Mićović
- Persida Ilić
- Svetozar Lj. Jovanović
- Djordje K. Stefanović
References
- ↑ Jocic, Zivojin (1897). Zhurnal Russkago Fiziko-Khimicheskago Obshchestva (Journal of the Russian Physical-Chemical Society). 29: 97.
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(help) - ↑ Reeve, Wilkins; McKee, James R.; Brown, Robert; Lakshmanan, Sitarama; McKee, Gertrude A. (1 March 1980). "Studies on the rearrangement of (trichloromethyl)carbinols to α-chloroacetic acids". Canadian Journal of Chemistry. 58 (5): 485–493. doi:10.1139/v80-078.