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May 23, 2011 - Volume 89, Number 21
- p. 32
Science & Technology Concentrates

More Science & Technology Concentrates
- Safer Synthesis Of Fluorophosphate Crystals
- Method for making analogs of metal oxides avoids hydrofluoric acid
- Biomass Burning Generates Isocyanic Acid
- Mass spectrometry method detects part-per-trillion levels of inflammation agent
- C-C Protein Crosslink Creates Substrate Pocket
- Novel structure found in microscopic algae protein
- Weak Acids Irritate Ion Channel
- Mechanism identifies action of acetic acid on cell membrane
- Metathesis Catalyst Catches A Few More Zs
- Revised version of ruthenium catalyst improves selectivity for Z alkenes in olefin metathesis reactions
- Spotting Clotting
- Detection strategy for blood clot regulator combines oligonucleotide, fluorescent probe and reversible inhibitor
- Molecules Vanish In Nanotubes
- Molecular dipoles induce mirror-image nanotube dipole that screen molecules from IR light
- Natural Halocarbon In Boar Meat
- Fungi chemical could aid understanding of halogenated pollutants
Topics Covered
More Science Stories
October 24, 2011
Bryostatins Retain Promise
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | pp. 10-17)New results in total synthesis reinvigorate a 40-year-old field of research.
For Cave's Art, An Uncertain Future
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | pp. 38-40)Disagreement on conservation course of action complicates a potential reopening.
Cancer Stem Cells
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | pp. 41-43)Researchers zero in on the pathways that allow cancer to bounce back after treatment.
What's That Stuff? Blue Jeans
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 44)Making the iconic pants requires both color-addition and color-removal chemistry.
Shedding Nanoparticles
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 5)Materials Science: Chemists observe metal objects sloughing off ions to form nanoparticles.
Modifying Messenger RNA
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 7)Chemical Biology: Methylated bases in mRNA may have roles in gene regulation and obesity.
Lab-On-A-Chip For Planets, Moons
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 8)Microfluidics: Automated chip is designed to detect extraterrestrial amino acids.
New Editor For Analytical Chemistry
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 9)Publishing: Jonathan Sweedler to take the helm.
Science & Technology Concentrates
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 37)
October 17, 2011
Improving Shop Safety
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | pp. 56-57)Yale updates policies on machine shop use after student death.
Cleaning Acrylics
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | pp. 58-59)Conservation scientists seek new ways to keep modern paintings looking their best.
Detecting H2S In Vivo (Member Content)
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | p. 60)Studies could lead to sensitive and selective analyses for tiny signaling agent.
Rules For Design
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | p. 9)Materials Science: Guidelines predict structures formed by nanoparticles and DNA linkers.
Identifying Modified Cells
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | p. 11)Molecular Biology: Technique tags and enriches cells genetically altered by nucleases.
Linker-Free Molecular Wires
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | p. 12)Electronics: Metal-carbon bonds increase electrical conductance.
Asymmetry From A Guest
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | p. 13)Stereochemistry: Enzymelike pocket that hosts chiral species controls catalyst's enantioselectivity.
Science & Technology Concentrates
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | pp. 54-56)
A straightforward route to preparing transition-metal fluorophosphate crystals has been described by researchers at the University of Southampton, in England, opening a new family of complexes to potential applications in energy storage, magnetic, and catalytic materials (J. Am. Chem. Soc., DOI: 10.1021/ja201096b). Metal oxide frameworks have long been popular for such uses. Replacing the oxide with fluoride is one way to alter the materials’ chemistry, dimensions, and performance. Jennifer A. Armstrong, Edward R. Williams, and Mark T. Weller combined anhydrous transition-metal fluorides with phosphoric acid and a fluoride salt or structure-directing agent, heated the mixture in a hydrothermal bomb, and allowed the products to crystallize. The approach eliminates the need for hydrofluoric acid, making synthesis easier and safer, the authors say. So far, they’ve prepared 45 Mn(III), Fe(III), Co(II), and Cu(II) complexes and characterized some of them in ion-exchange reactions, in lithium-insertion reactions of interest for rechargeable batteries, and in magnetic-susceptibility tests. The group observed that the fluoride ions often bridge metal sites, and the frameworks have fluoride-lined channels that aid cation mobility.
- Chemical & Engineering News
- ISSN 0009-2347
- Copyright © 2011 American Chemical Society
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