Home Toward controlled synthesis of carbon nanotubes and graphenes
Article Publicly Available

Toward controlled synthesis of carbon nanotubes and graphenes

  • Kenichiro Itami
Published/Copyright: March 13, 2012

Online erschienen: 2012-3-13
Erschienen im Druck: 2012-3-13

© 2013 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Preface
  2. Putting aromatic compounds to work: Rational synthesis of organic 2D polymers
  3. Arylene–ethynylene macrocycles: Privileged shape-persistent building blocks for organic materials
  4. Double-stranded polymeric ladderphanes
  5. Solution-phase synthesis of bowl- and basket-shaped fullerene fragments via benzannulated enyne–allenes
  6. Toward controlled synthesis of carbon nanotubes and graphenes
  7. Construction of novel molecular architectures from anthracene units and acetylene linkers
  8. Functional oligothiophenes toward molecular wires in single-molecular electronics
  9. Development of fullerene derivatives with high LUMO level through changes in π-conjugated system shape
  10. Indolocarbazole-based anion receptors and molecular switches
  11. Linear aromatic amide foldamer-derived supramolecular architectures and materials
  12. A programmable single-component diode based on an ambipolar organic field-effect transistor (OFET)
  13. Synthesis of benzobisoxazole-based D-π-A-π-D organic chromophores with variable optical and electronic properties
  14. Tetrathiafulvalene vinylogues as versatile building blocks for new organic materials
  15. Copper-catalyzed alkyne-azide cycloaddition for the functionalization of fullerene building blocks
  16. Synthesis and characterization of π-conjugated peptide-based supramolecular materials
  17. Hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronene in organic electronics
  18. Application of graph theory and topological models for the determination of fundamentals of the aromatic character of pi-conjugated hydrocarbons
  19. Bowl-to-bowl inversion of sumanene derivatives
  20. Antiaromatic ions and their value in quantifying aromaticity, as probes of delocalization, and potential as stable diradicals
Downloaded on 8.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1351/PAC-CON-11-11-15/html
Scroll to top button