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Solvent‐Free Thermal Defect Engineering in Molecular Frameworks With Volatile Linkers
Thermal removal of neutral volatile linkers enables precise and solvent‐free generation of metal vacancies in MOFs. This strategy affords redox‐stable, coordinatively unsaturated FeII sites with tunable spin, ligand coordination, and catalytic behavior. The approach offers a general route to design defect‐functional materials through local coordination
Sonia Martínez‐Giménez +9 more
wiley +1 more source
Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles in Biomedicine: Advances and Prospects
Mesoporous silica nanoparticles offer unique properties like high surface area, tunable pores, and functionalization. They excel in drug delivery, tissue engineering, and stimuli‐responsive therapies, enabling targeted and controlled treatments. With roles in cancer therapy and diagnostics, their clinical translation requires addressing challenges in ...
Miguel Manzano, María Vallet‐Regí
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2D α‐Co(OH)2 interleaved with Mo species displays an appealing dual functionality for the production and use of green hydrogen.Mo incorporation greatly benefits the electrochemical behaviour in Oxygen Evolution Reaction for H2 production, while the magnetocaloric response at liquid H2 temperature paves the way for alternative cryogenic refrigerants ...
Daniel Muñoz‐Gil +14 more
wiley +1 more source
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2023
This series provides authoritative coverage of topical and emerging research areas in inorganic materials chemistry and its related disciplines in physics, biology and materials science. The series covers the three key areas of materials class, function and methodology, with each volume themed around a specific type of material, characterisation method,
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This series provides authoritative coverage of topical and emerging research areas in inorganic materials chemistry and its related disciplines in physics, biology and materials science. The series covers the three key areas of materials class, function and methodology, with each volume themed around a specific type of material, characterisation method,
openaire +1 more source
Organic-inorganic optical materials
Optics Letters, 1994We describe the use of an intriguing class of materials, termed polycerams, for applications in integrated optics. Polycerams are ceramic-polymer hybrid materials that are synthesized by wet-chemical methods. As films they can be deposited in single-step operations with thicknesses from 5 microm, and their refractive indices and Abbe numbers can be ...
S, Motakef, J M, Boulton, D R, Uhlmann
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Geological and inorganic materials
Analytical Chemistry, 1987The current review covers the literature reported from November 1984 to October 1986. This review covers the analytical techniques that are currently applied to the analysis of geological and inorganic materials. The authors have tried to highlight work either that applies state of the art techniques to novel problems or that has advanced the state of ...
L L, Jackson +4 more
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Hybrid Inorganic—Organic Mesoporous Materials
ChemInform, 2004AbstractFor Abstract see ChemInform Abstract in Full Text.
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Inorganic Photorefractive Materials
2000Light-induced refractive index changes — so-called photorefractive effects — in inorganic electro-optic crystals were discovered by Ashkin et al. in 1966 [1]. Though in the beginning these effects seemed to be very undesirable (“optical damage”), Chen et al. recognized only two years later the significance for holographic data storage [2].
Buse, Karsten, Krätzig, Eckhard
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Physics World, 1990
As optical technology becomes poised to revolutionise the world of communication the need for novel nonlinear optic (NLO) and electrooptic (EO) materials is increasing rapidly. NLO and EO materials come in many shapes and sizes; there are the large, aesthetically-pleasing, optically perfect and well known inorganic single crystals such as lithium ...
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As optical technology becomes poised to revolutionise the world of communication the need for novel nonlinear optic (NLO) and electrooptic (EO) materials is increasing rapidly. NLO and EO materials come in many shapes and sizes; there are the large, aesthetically-pleasing, optically perfect and well known inorganic single crystals such as lithium ...
openaire +1 more source

