Battle of bond formations

Anionic boron- and gallium-containing N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) analogues display contrasting reactivity towards the half-sandwich titanium complex. Where one reacts to form the first example of a titanium gallyl compound, the other reaction (with boron NHC) generates a dearomatised pyridyl fragment.

Cameron Jones and his team from Monash University have collaborated once again with Simon Aldridge, Philip Mountford and colleagues at Oxford University, publishing their results in ChemComm. Why not download the article today and blog some comments below? The article is free to access until the 8th October 2010.

 

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Printing microelectrodes

Tin-doped Indium oxide, a widely used conductor in optoelectronic devices, has been used to form microelectrodes that can be patterned in both 1D and 3D arrays, by direct-write assembly of sol–gel inks with varying concentration.

Jennifer A. Lewis and co-workers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, in the US, have published their results in ChemComm and they believe the approach may open up new avenues for fabricating printed electronic and optoelectronic devices in unusual layouts.

Fancy reading more? Then why not download the article today and blog some comments below? This article is free to access until the 8th October.

 

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Cold-welding for gold

 

Large-scale fabrication of highly ordered gold nanochannel monolayers has been demonstrated by scientists in Japan. Yingpu Bi and Jinhua Ye fron the National Institute for Materials Science, in Tsukuba, have used the galvanic replacement reaction over aligned silver nanowire arrays, which can be employed as a simple and powerful cold-welding technique to make these gold nanochannels.

Why not read the article today and blog your thoughts below? Published in ChemComm, this communication is free to access until the 8th October.

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Copper uncovers truth behind cytotoxicity

Many human disorders are characterized by amyloid accumulation, in particular Alzheimer’s disease, type 2 diabetes mellitus and Parkinson’s disease. Research shows that copper enhances amyloid activity and mediates human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP) oligomerization.

 

Yan-Mei Li and co-workers at the Tsinghua University, in China, have used copper (and nickel) to mimic these effects and it has helped shed some light on why we observe cytotoxicity for type 2 diabetes.

 

 

 

 

Curious to know more, why not download the article today and blog some comments below? Published in ChemComm, this article is free to access until the 8th October.

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Tinker, tailor, nanoparticle maker

Scientists in the US have described a new way of preparing gold nanoparticle superstructures with tailorable thicknesses, formed using a self-assembled gold-binding peptide conjugate template. Nathaniel Rosi and colleagues at the University of Pittsburgh, examined how the synthesis and assembly mechanism impacts the organization of the superstructures.

The article is free to access until the 8th of October, so why not download the article today and blog your thoughts and comments below?

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Step up for green iron production

A more environmentally friendly way of producing iron developed by scientists in the US and China could reduce industrial carbon dioxide emissions by a quarter worldwide.

Since the beginning of the industrial revolution, iron metal has been produced by melting iron ore at temperatures over 2000°C in a blast furnace. This produces large amounts of CO2, which is released into the atmosphere and contributes to climate change.

The new method developed by Stuart Licht at George Washington University in Washington, DC and Baohui Wang at Northeast Petroleum University in Daqing could result in completely CO2-free iron production. The team show that iron ores (Fe2O3 and Fe3O4) can be dissolved in molten lithium carbonate  at temperatures of around 800°C – a process that was previously thought impossible. Adding an electrical current to the molten mix separates the iron ore into its component parts, iron and oxygen, which can be collected by two electrodes in the solution.

Green iron production

Global carbon dioxide emissions could be cut by a quarter

Less energy is required to generate the lower temperatures and power the electrolysis, but Licht also demonstrates that these can be achieved using renewable energy. The team employ their recently developed solar technique, called solar thermal electrochemical photo (Step) – which uses the Sun’s thermal energy to melt the lithium carbonate solution while the visible light energy powers the electrolysis. Using the Step process no CO2 is produced.

‘Step production of iron would be cost effective, and could allow iron production facilities to be housed in new geographic locations, such as in closer to urban centres or in high sunlight geographies,’ says Licht, as well as eliminating one of the major contributors to global carbon dioxide emission.

Neal Woodbury, a renewable energy expert at Arizona State University, US, comments ‘if the Step process can be performed at industrial scale, it holds considerable promise. Of particular note is that it should be possible to utilise waste heat from the processes that produce the required electricity, thus decreasing the energy input as well.’

Licht has previously shown that the Step technology can be used for carbon capture and for generating hydrogen fuel. And says he sees the scale-up of CO2-free iron production from the laborartory to industry as an exciting challenge.

Emma Shiells

Read the whole story in the ChemComm article.

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Unilever-RSC International Symposium in China announced

One country, three cities, three meetings – The Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) and Unilever are coming to China.

This Symposium will feature three one day meetings that will take place at three different locations throughout China. Each one day meeting will feature a selection of lectures covering the properties and applications of many different materials given by some of the world’s leading international scientists. The symposium is supported by Unilever and has been organised by them, the RSC, as well as the three host universities.

The three symposia will take place at the following:-

*  Monday 8th November – Symposium at University of Chemical Technology (BUCT), Beijing, hosted by  Professor Wantai Yang 
* Wednesday 10th November – Symposium at Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, hosted by Professor Bogeng Li 
* Thursday 11th November – Symposium at East China University of Science and Technology (ECUST),  Shanghai, hosted by Professor He Tian 

 

Attendance at any of the three one day meetings is free although delegates are asked to register; The symposium will appeal to academic and industrial scientists with an interest in functional materials science. Student participation is also strongly encouraged and each symposium will offer students the opportunity to present their work during a poster session.

For more information on this symposium, or to see the list of speakers or to register your attendance please visit the website for more details.

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Transfer agents & catalysis for N-Heterocyclic carbenes

Used by many researchers in catalysis, N-Heterocyclic carbenes (NHC) can play a variety of roles in chemistry. Last month, Catherine Cazin and her co-workers at the University of St Andrews have published two articles in ChemComm, showing that their NHC complexes can be successfully used as either transfer agents or for efficiently catalysing ring closing metathesis (RCM) reactions.

The first article reports a way to easily prepare inexpensive copper synthons as NHC transfer agents to generate catalytically active gold and palladium complexes. It is the first example showing the transfer of NHC ligand from one metal centre to another. Furthermore, the resulting gold and palladium complexes are ones that are frequently used in transition metal-mediated catalysis.

The second article reports how a ruthenium-based metathesis catalyst fluctuates between trans- and cis-isomer upon heating. It is the first example of an indenylidene complex bearing monodentate (NHC and phosphite) ligands that exhibit cis-configuration.  The catalytic studies also showed that these systems are able to efficiently promote RCM reactions using very low loading levels and seem to last longer than other pre-catalysts currently used.

Both these papers are free to access until the 8th of October, so why not click on the links above, download and read the articles today!

Please feel free to blog any thoughts or comments below too!

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Small bilirubin adsorbents

Millimetre-sized mesoporous carbon spheres (MMCSs) with smooth surfaces and penetrating mesoporous channels have been successfully prepared using an emulsion-EISA technique. Jianlin Shi and fellow scientists in Shanghai, China have found them to be much better bilirubin adsorbents than activated carbon spheres that are commercially available . Hemolysis and coagulation assays of MMCSs show that they have negligible hemolysis effect and do not induce blood coagulation, which means that they may be very promising for applications in practical blood perfusion.

Fancy reading more? Why not read the article here, published in ChemComm, it is free to access until the end of September or comment on the post below.

 

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MRI dual imaging success

Manganese oxide nanoparticles with a hydrophilic coating show promise as a contrast agent for Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) due to the nanoparticles efficient water-surface interaction resulting in prominent T1 contrast.  

 

Xiaoyuan Chen, at Stanford University, in the US and colleagues in China, have carried out a proof-of-concept study, where they’ve coupled the nanoparticles with 64Cu radioisotope and performed PET/MRI dual imaging in a U87MG xenograft model. It showed good tumor accumulation for both imaging modalities.

 
Fancy reading more? Then why not read the communication here, which is free to access until the end of September or comment on the post below.
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