J
Jan Reedijk
Researcher at Leiden University
Publications - 1165
Citations - 45902
Jan Reedijk is an academic researcher from Leiden University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ligand & Crystal structure. The author has an hindex of 80, co-authored 1163 publications receiving 43747 citations. Previous affiliations of Jan Reedijk include Nagoya City University & University of Münster.
Papers
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Anion‐π‐Wechselwirkungen ins rechte Licht gerückt
TL;DR: In den last few years, the Anionπ-Wechselwirkung (eine anziehende Kraft zwischen einem elektronenarmen aromatischen system und einem Anion) has been unerforschte nichtkovalenten Bindung erkannt, und ihre Natur wurde experimentell und theoretisch untersucht as discussed by the authors.
Patent
Platinum-containing compounds methods for their preparation and applications thereof
Hendrik Jan Houthoff,Jan Reedijk,Tinka Jelsma,Remco Maria Van Es,Franciscus Michiel van den Berg,Edwin L. M. Lempers,Marieke J. Bloemink +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a list of platinum-based linker compounds having the structure: where Pt is a platinum atom, A and B are the same or different reactive moieties, and X and Y are stabilizing substituents.
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Orbital symmetries and magnetic interaction between copper(II) ions and the o-semiquinone radical. Magnetic studies of (di-2-pyridylamine)(3,5-di-tert-butyl-o-semiquinonato)copper(II) perchlorate and bis(bis(3,5-di-tert-butyl-o-semiquinonato)copper(II))
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Synthesis, magnetic properties, and X-ray structure of catena-µ3-nitrato-O,O′,O″-[µ3-hydroxo-1-nitrato-1,2;1,3;2,3-tris(µ-pyrazolato-N,N′)-2,3-bis(pyrazole-N2)tricopper(II) monohydrate]. An unusual chain of trinuclear copper clusters
TL;DR: In this article, an unusual trimeric CuII species of formula [Cu3(OH)(pz)3(Hpz),2(NO3)2]·H2O (HpZ = pyrazole) has been prepared from air oxidation of [Cu(Pz)2( NO3)] in the presence of moisture.
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Towards appropriate indicators of journal impact
TL;DR: A critical examination of the journal impact data in theJournal Citation Reports (JCR), published by the Institute for Scientific Information, has shown that the JCR impact factor is inaccurate and biased towards journals revealing a rapid maturing or decline in impact.