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Conformation Control of Oligosilanes Based on Configurationally Constrained Bicyclic Disilane Units

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This article is published in Angewandte Chemie.The article was published on 2000-09-15. It has received 91 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Disilane & Bicyclic molecule.

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Switching devices based on interlocked molecules.

TL;DR: Singly and multiply configurable solid-state switching devices that are based upon electrochemically switchable molecular and supramolecular systems are discussed in terms of both the synthesis of the molecular components and the fabrication and performance of the devices.
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Shuttles and muscles: linear molecular machines based on transition metals.

TL;DR: Transition-metal-containing rotaxanes can behave as linear motors at the molecular level and it is hoped that, in the future, other types of signals can be used (electrochemical or light pulse) to trigger the motion.
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Artificial Molecular-Level Machines: Which Energy To Make Them Work?†

TL;DR: A number of elementary functions performed by molecular-level machines are illustrated, and more complex ones are foreseen.
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Second Generation Light-Driven Molecular Motors. Unidirectional Rotation Controlled by a Single Stereogenic Center with Near-Perfect Photoequilibria and Acceleration of the Speed of Rotation by Structural Modification

TL;DR: Nine new molecular motors, consisting of a 2,3-dihydro-2-methylnaphtho[2,1-b]thiopyran or 2, 3-diversey-3-methylphenanthrene upper part and a (thio)xanthene, 10,10-dimethylanthracene, or dibenzocycloheptene lower part, connected by a central double bond, were synthesized.
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Operating Molecular Elevators

TL;DR: Inspired by the concept of multivalency in living systems, two mechanically interlocked molecules have been conceived that incorporate not once or twice but thrice the features of a pH-switchable [2]rotaxane with two orthogonal recognition sites.
References
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BookDOI

The chemistry of organic silicon compounds

TL;DR: A.R.Bassindale and P.G.Taylor as mentioned in this paper discussed the photochemistry of organosilicon compounds, A.R., B.B.Birkofer and O.Ojima.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polysilane high polymers

Robert D. Miller, +1 more
- 01 Sep 1989 - 
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