Artikel
Öffentlich zugänglich
Recent advances in spin chemistry
-
Anatoly L. Buchachenko
Veröffentlicht/Copyright:
1. Januar 2009
Published Online: 2009-01-01
Published in Print: 2000-01-01
© 2013 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Preface
- Femtochemistry. Past, present, and future
- From rotaxanes to knots. Templating, hydrogen bond patterns, and cyclochirality
- Recent advances in spin chemistry
- Mechanisms and consequences of oxygen transfer reactions
- Adventures in molecular recognition. The ins and outs of templating
- Influence of chloride, water, and organic solvents on the physical properties of ionic liquids
- Microreactor-controlled selectivity in organic photochemical reactions
- Reactive intermediates. Some chemistry of quinone methides
- Carbenium and carbonium ions in liquid- and solid-superacid-catalyzed activation of small alkanes
- Concepts of metal-mediated methane functionalization. An intersection of experiment and theory
- Comparative chemistry of unsaturated compounds of Group 14 elements
- Dendrimers as reactive modules for the synthesis of new structure-controlled, higher-complexity megamers
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Preface
- Femtochemistry. Past, present, and future
- From rotaxanes to knots. Templating, hydrogen bond patterns, and cyclochirality
- Recent advances in spin chemistry
- Mechanisms and consequences of oxygen transfer reactions
- Adventures in molecular recognition. The ins and outs of templating
- Influence of chloride, water, and organic solvents on the physical properties of ionic liquids
- Microreactor-controlled selectivity in organic photochemical reactions
- Reactive intermediates. Some chemistry of quinone methides
- Carbenium and carbonium ions in liquid- and solid-superacid-catalyzed activation of small alkanes
- Concepts of metal-mediated methane functionalization. An intersection of experiment and theory
- Comparative chemistry of unsaturated compounds of Group 14 elements
- Dendrimers as reactive modules for the synthesis of new structure-controlled, higher-complexity megamers