T
Tomislav Friščić
Researcher at McGill University
Publications - 320
Citations - 22459
Tomislav Friščić is an academic researcher from McGill University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mechanochemistry & Cocrystal. The author has an hindex of 70, co-authored 294 publications receiving 18307 citations. Previous affiliations of Tomislav Friščić include University of Zagreb & University of Iowa.
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Mechanochemistry: opportunities for new and cleaner synthesis
Stuart L. James,Christopher J. Adams,Carsten Bolm,Dario Braga,Paul Collier,Tomislav Friščić,Fabrizia Grepioni,Kenneth D. M. Harris,Geoff Hyett,William Jones,Anke Krebs,James Mack,Lucia Maini,A. Guy Orpen,Ivan P. Parkin,William C. Shearouse,Jonathan W. Steed,Daniel C. Waddell +17 more
TL;DR: Concentrating on recent advances, this article covers industrial aspects, inorganic materials, organic synthesis, cocrystallisation, pharmaceutical aspects, metal complexes, supramolecular aspects and characterization methods.
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Mechanochemistry: A Force of Synthesis
Jean-Louis Do,Tomislav Friščić +1 more
TL;DR: A brief overview of the recent achievements and opportunities created by mechanochemistry, including access to materials, molecular targets, and synthetic strategies that are hard or even impossible to access by conventional means are provided.
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Recent Advances in Understanding the Mechanism of Cocrystal Formation via Grinding
Tomislav Friščić,William Jones +1 more
TL;DR: A brief and systematic overview of recent advances in understanding mechanochemical cocrystallization at macroscopic (bulk phase transformations) and microscopic levels (molecular recognition) is given in this article.
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Supramolecular control of reactivity in the solid state: from templates to ladderanes to metal-organic frameworks.
Leonard R. MacGillivray,Giannis S. Papaefstathiou,Tomislav Friščić,Tamara D. Hamilton,Dejan-Krešimir Bučar,Qianli Chu,Dushyant B. Varshney,Ivan G. Georgiev +7 more
TL;DR: The observations suggest that the organic solid state can be integrated into more mainstream settings of synthetic organic chemistry and be developed to construct functional crystalline solids.
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Mechanochemistry for Synthesis
TL;DR: This mini-review examines the potential of mechanochemistry in chemical and materials synthesis, by providing a cross-section of the recent developments in using ball milling for the formation of molecules and materials based on covalent and coordination bonds.