T
Thomas Müller
Researcher at Ruhr University Bochum
Publications - 371
Citations - 20977
Thomas Müller is an academic researcher from Ruhr University Bochum. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catalysis & Parkinson's disease. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 360 publications receiving 18967 citations. Previous affiliations of Thomas Müller include Bayer & Bayer MaterialScience.
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Ala30Pro mutation in the gene encoding alpha-synuclein in Parkinson's disease.
Rejko Krüger,Wilfried Kuhn,Thomas Müller,Dirk Woitalla,Manuel B. Graeber,Sigfried Kösel,Horst Przuntek,Jörg T. Epplen,Ludger Schöls,Olaf Riess +9 more
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Hydroamination: direct addition of amines to alkenes and alkynes.
TL;DR: Hydroamination of Alkenes and Alkynes under Microwave Irradiation and Nitromercuration Reactions 3878 9.8.4.5.
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Sustainable Conversion of Carbon Dioxide: An Integrated Review of Catalysis and Life Cycle Assessment
Jens Artz,Thomas Müller,Katharina Thenert,Johanna Kleinekorte,Raoul Meys,André Dirk Sternberg,André Bardow,Walter Leitner,Walter Leitner +8 more
TL;DR: The motivation to develop CO2-based chemistry does not depend primarily on the absolute amount of CO2 emissions that can be remediated by a single technology and is stimulated by the significance of the relative improvement in carbon balance and other critical factors defining the environmental impact of chemical production in all relevant sectors in accord with the principles of green chemistry.
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Metal-Initiated Amination of Alkenes and Alkynes.
Thomas Müller,Matthias Beller +1 more
TL;DR: The catalytic production of organic molecules is one of the most important applications of organometallic chemistry and enantioselective syntheses of molecules bearing an amine functionality use classical stoichiometric reactions with chiral auxiliaries or utilize enantiomerically pure starting material.
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Worldwide innovations in the development of carbon capture technologies and the utilization of CO2
Peter Markewitz,Wilhelm Kuckshinrichs,Walter Leitner,Walter Leitner,Jochen Linssen,Petra Zapp,Richard Bongartz,Andrea Schreiber,Thomas Müller +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare the status of three main lines of CCS technologies with respect to efficiency, energy consumption, and technical feasibility as well as the implications of the CCS on the efficiency and structure of the energy supply chain.