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This series provides inorganic chemists and materials scientistswith a forum for critical, authoritative evaluations of advances inevery area of the discipline. Volume 58 continues to report recentadvances with a significant, up-to-date selection of contributionsby internationally-recognized researchers.
The chapters of this volume are devoted to the followingtopics:
- Tris(dithiolene) Chemistry: A Golden Jubilee - How to find an HNO needle in a (bio)-chemicalHaystack - Photoactive Metal Nitrosyl and Carbonyl Complexes Derivedfrom Designed Auxiliary Ligands: An Emerging Class
…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This series provides inorganic chemists and materials scientistswith a forum for critical, authoritative evaluations of advances inevery area of the discipline. Volume 58 continues to report recentadvances with a significant, up-to-date selection of contributionsby internationally-recognized researchers.

The chapters of this volume are devoted to the followingtopics:

- Tris(dithiolene) Chemistry: A Golden Jubilee
- How to find an HNO needle in a (bio)-chemicalHaystack
- Photoactive Metal Nitrosyl and Carbonyl Complexes Derivedfrom Designed Auxiliary Ligands: An Emerging Class ofPhotochemotherapeutics
- Metal--Metal Bond-Containing Complexes as Catalysts forC--H Functionalization Iron Catalysis in Synthetic Chemistry
- Reactive Transition Metal Nitride Complexes

Suitable for inorganic chemists and materials scientists inacademia, government, and industries including pharmaceutical, finechemical, biotech, and agricultural.

Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Autorenporträt
Kenneth D. Karlin is the Ira Remsen Professor of Chemistry at Johns Hopkins University. He received his PhD from Columbia University. Dr. Karlin's bioinorganic research focuses on coordination chemistry relevant to biological and environmental processes, involving copper or heme (porphyrin-iron) complexes.  Dr. Karlin's main approach involves synthetic modeling, i.e. biomimetic chemistry.  He is the winner of the prestigous F. Albert Cotton Award in Synthetic Inorganic Chemistry and the Sierra Nevada Distinguished Chemist Award, both awarded in 2009