Results 281 to 290 of about 1,812,237 (341)
Thermally accelerated Heck reaction under direct mechanocatalysis using palladium milling balls.
Templ J+4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Investigations into cyanobacterial photoacclimation processes address longstanding proposals for improving crop yields. [PDF]
Gisriel CJ, Brudvig GW.
europepmc +1 more source
Triple cross-electrophile coupling enabled by palladium/norbornene cooperative catalysis. [PDF]
Ye J+7 more
europepmc +1 more source
Cross-Coupling Reactions of Nitroarenes [PDF]
Cross-coupling reactions are powerful synthetic tools to construct diverse chemical bonds often found in, for example, advanced materials and pharmaceuticals. Since their discovery, haloarenes have habitually been used as electrophilic coupling partners both in academic and industrial contexts.
Myuto Kashihara, Yoshiaki Nakao
openaire +2 more sources
CROSS‐REACTIONS OF KLEBSIELLA [PDF]
An earlier study of more than 60 Klebsiella K‐polysaccharides in anti‐pneumococcal sera of many capsular types provided the impetus for the present work. With anti‐Klebsiella sera, some of these cross‐reactions are now shown to be reciprocal. In most instances in which several or many K‐substances precipitated antipneumococcal sera of a given type ...
Chyang T. Fang+5 more
openaire +1 more source
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
On-Surface Cross-Coupling Reactions
The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters, 2023On-surface synthesis, as a bottom-up synthetic method, has been proven to be a powerful tool for atomically precise fabrication of low-dimensional carbon nanomaterials over the past 15 years. This method relies on covalent coupling reactions that occur on solid substrates such as metal or metal oxide surfaces under ultra-high-vacuum conditions, and the
Guang-Yan Xing+3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Cross‐reaction and cross‐combination ratios
International Journal of Chemical Kinetics, 1987AbstractA simple collision theory model for reaction between two different radicals shows that the cross‐reaction ratio, ϕ*, is 2 only if the masses and collision diameters of the radicals are identical; for all other combinations of mass and size, ϕ* is greater than 2. The value of ϕ* is shown to depend simply on the ratios of the masses and diameters
John R. Christie, Neville L. Arthur
openaire +2 more sources