Journal ArticleDOI
Artificial Organic Host Molecules for Anions
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This article is published in Chemical Reviews.The article was published on 1997-08-05. It has received 1659 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Organic anion.read more
Citations
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Gold nanoparticles in chemical and biological sensing.
TL;DR: The advent of AuNP as a sensory element provided a broad spectrum of innovative approaches for the detection of metal ions, small molecules, proteins, nucleic acids, malignant cells, etc. in a rapid and efficient manner.
Journal ArticleDOI
Anion Recognition and Sensing: The State of the Art and Future Perspectives
Paul D. Beer,Philip A. Gale +1 more
TL;DR: Anion recognition chemistry has grown from its beginnings with positively charged ammonium cryptand receptors for halide binding to a plethora of charged and neutral, cyclic and acyclic, inorganic and organic supramolecular host systems for the selective complexation, detection, and separation of anionic guest species.
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Fluorogenic and chromogenic chemosensors and reagents for anions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer
David R. Weinberg,Christopher J. Gagliardi,Jonathan F. Hull,Christine Fecenko Murphy,Caleb A. Kent,Brittany C. Westlake,Amit Paul,Daniel H. Ess,Dewey G. McCafferty,Thomas J. Meyer +9 more
TL;DR: Proton-coupled electron transfer is an important mechanism for charge transfer in a wide variety of systems including biology- and materials-oriented venues and several are reviewed.
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Small-molecule H-bond donors in asymmetric catalysis.
References
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Zur Lehre von der Wirkung der Salze
Journal ArticleDOI
Preparation, Clathration Ability, and Catalysis of a Two-Dimensional Square Network Material Composed of Cadmium(II) and 4,4'-Bipyridine
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Scales of solute hydrogen-bonding: their construction and application to physicochemical and biochemical processes
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Thermodynamics of solvation of ions. Part 5.—Gibbs free energy of hydration at 298.15 K
TL;DR: In this paper, the standard molar Gibbs free energies of hydration, ΔhydG°, of 109 (mainly inorganic) ions ranging in their charges from −3 to +4 have been compiled and interpreted in terms of a model used previously for other thermodynamic quantities.
Related Papers (5)
Anion Recognition and Sensing: The State of the Art and Future Perspectives
Paul D. Beer,Philip A. Gale +1 more