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Mark J. Muldoon

Researcher at Queen's University Belfast

Publications -  46
Citations -  3450

Mark J. Muldoon is an academic researcher from Queen's University Belfast. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ionic liquid & Catalysis. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 46 publications receiving 3208 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark J. Muldoon include University of St Andrews & Queen's University.

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Improving carbon dioxide solubility in ionic liquids.

TL;DR: Results show that ionic liquids containing increased fluoroalkyl chains on either the cation or anion do improve CO2 solubility when compared to less fluorinated ionic liquid previously studied, and it was found that it was possible to obtain similar, high levels of CO2solubility in nonfluorous ionic fluids.
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Phase transition and decomposition temperatures, heat capacities and viscosities of pyridinium ionic liquids

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present melting temperatures, glass transition temperatures, decomposition temperatures, heat capacities, and viscosities for a large series of pyridinium-based ionic liquids.
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Investigations of solvent–solute interactions in room temperature ionic liquids using solvatochromic dyes

TL;DR: In this article, different measures of polarity and nucleophilicity of a range of ionic liquids have been investigated using two solvatochromic dyes; the polarity appears to be largely cation controlled, while the donor strength is entirely anion dependent.
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Aerobic oxidation catalysis with stable radicals

TL;DR: This review will discuss the use of stable radicals (primarily nitroxyl radicals) in aerobic oxidation catalysis, highlighting the catalytic performance, mechanistic insights and the expanding synthetic utility of these catalytic systems.
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Ionic liquids: polar, but weakly coordinating solvents for the first biphasic oligomerisation of ethene to higher α-olefins with cationic Ni complexes

TL;DR: In this article, the turnover frequencies of alk-1-ene products were correlated with polarity data obtained using solvatochromic dyes, and they were shown to have better reactivity and selectivity than in conventional solvents.