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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Carl Louis Rudolf Alexander Leuckart (June 23, 1854 - July 24, 1889) was a German chemist who discovered the Leuckart reaction in 1885. He was the son of Karl Georg Friedrich Rudolf Leuckart (1822 -1898) a renown German zoologist. He received his PhD at the University of Leipzig in 1879 and his habilitation at University of Göttingen in 1883, where he also became professor. The Leuckart reaction is the chemical reaction of ammonium salts of formic acid with aldehydes (or ketones) to form amines by reductive amination. The reaction is named after…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Carl Louis Rudolf Alexander Leuckart (June 23, 1854 - July 24, 1889) was a German chemist who discovered the Leuckart reaction in 1885. He was the son of Karl Georg Friedrich Rudolf Leuckart (1822 -1898) a renown German zoologist. He received his PhD at the University of Leipzig in 1879 and his habilitation at University of Göttingen in 1883, where he also became professor. The Leuckart reaction is the chemical reaction of ammonium salts of formic acid with aldehydes (or ketones) to form amines by reductive amination. The reaction is named after Rudolf Leuckart . In addition to ammonia, primary and secondary amines are also successful. Formamide or substituted formamides can also be used instead of ammonium formate. When excess formic acid is used, the reaction is called the Leuckart-Wallach reaction. The reaction is named after Rudolf Leuckart and Otto Wallach.