The Diels–Alder reaction was first reported in 1928 by Otto Diels and Kurt Alder; they were awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry for their work in 1950.
alder | Alder | Video on demand | electron | video on demand | Chain Reaction | Acorn Electron | Visa Electron | Thomas Demand | Transmission electron microscopy | Chemical reaction | Chain Reaction (song) | Thermidorian Reaction | Nuclear chain reaction | Multiplicative inverse | inverse-square law | electron transport chain | Electron microscope | chemical reaction | supply and demand | SN2 reaction | SN1 reaction | Psychotic Reaction | nuclear reaction | electron beam | Chain Reaction (game show) | Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction | Vinyl On Demand | Substitution reaction | Scanning transmission electron microscopy |
The first TMS adduct, a Diels-Alder cycloadduct of Sc3N by C80, was reported by Dorn et al. in 2002.