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Reaching his century! – Mike Ward publishes 100th article in Dalton Transactions

The recent publication of the following Perspective article in Dalton Transactions means that Mike Ward from the University of Sheffield has now published an amazing 100 articles in the journal! We caught up with Mike to find out what this achievement means to him – find out below.

Structural and photophysical properties of luminescent cyanometallates [M(diimine)(CN)4]2− and their supramolecular assemblies
Michael D. Ward
Dalton Trans., 2010, 39, 8851-8867 DOI: 10.1039/C0DT00312C, Perspective

Congratulations Mike, 100 articles in Dalton Transactions! What does this achievement mean to you?

It’s very gratifying, and slightly humbling, to have passed 100 papers in Dalton Transactions, a journal for which I have particular fondness.  My first Dalton Transactions paper (1988, page 2655) was the first full paper from my PhD work with Ed Constable, on double helical complexes of linear oligopyridine ligands. My first independent paper, from when I was a new lecturer in Bristol, was also in Dalton Transactions (1992, 703). Although an international journal, Dalton Transactions has always published much of the best home-grown inorganic chemistry and has helped to give UK chemistry its international reputation and I have enjoyed playing a role in that.

Has your research focus changed over the course of these 100 articles and if so, can you describe how?

It has both grown and stayed the same. Since my PhD work with Ed Constable I have been fascinated by self-assembly and how elaborate structures can form under their own steam from simple components on the basis of geometric ‘rules’ that are embedded in the components and not always obvious. I don’t work on double helicates any more – except by accident sometimes! – but my interest in self-assembly is alive and well and now involves polyhedral coordination cages. I have also developed an interest in the photophysical properties of metal complexes and their supramolecular assemblies and this forms the other major strand of my research. Combing the two apparently disparate fields is my current goal: coming up with an elaborate self-assembled cage which is photophysically active and can perform (for example) photoinduced catalysis on trapped guests.

Cover by Mike Ward for Dalton Transactions issue 38, 2010 featuring his 100th article

Your 100th article was a Perspective about ‘luminescent cyanometallates’ – why are these compounds important?

These complexes have a fascinating combination of self-assembly abilites and photophysical properties: my two favourite areas. The externally-directed cyanides allow them to be used as the basis of cyanide-bridged coordination networks and polynuclear assemblies, and they also have desirable photophysical properties such as tuneable luminescence from long-lived excited states. The ease with which these building-blocks can be incorporated into supramolecular assemblies via metal-ion coordination, or hydrogen- or halogen- bonding, makes them far more versatile than the more well-known species such as [Ru(bipy)3]2+, whose photophysical properties have been studied for decades but which are more difficult to combine with other components as they have no externally-directed vacant coordination sites.

What challenges do you see your field of supramolecular photochemistry addressing in the next five-ten years?

Combination of the two fields of self-assembly and photophysics is perfectly encapsulated in the structure and properties of the photosynthetic reaction centre. Several components are held together in a precisely-controlled way by non-covalent interactions; and the photophysical properties of the components are perfectly tuned to achieve the vectorial electron-transfer that is the basis of the natural conversion of light to chemical energy. The ability to do something comparable in an artificial system – a problem that is being tackled in different ways by many groups around the world – would have a major impact on the looming energy crisis and would be one of the most useful things that chemistry can accomplish for the human race.

Why do you choose to publish in Dalton Transactions?

I have always enjoyed publishing in Dalton Transactions because it is fast, efficient, and friendly. Over the years I have got to know the editorial staff (two of whom have been PhD graduates from my group; Claire White (now Darby and Senior Publishing Editor at the RSC) and David Bardwell [now works for CCDC]) and the ability to pick up the phone and sort out queries or problems quickly and easily is invaluable.  Dalton Transactions makes an impact too: 13 of my first 100 articles in Dalton Transactions have had 50 citations or more to date.

I wonder if my most memorable experience of rapid publication (a communication: Dalton Trans., 2004, 1524) has ever been exceeded by the RSC. It was accepted less than two weeks after submission, proofs arrived a few days later and were immediately dealt with, and it appeared on the web less than three weeks after it was submitted. And that included a bank holiday weekend!

What are you working on at the moment?

My two main interests at the moment continue to be what they have for a while. But specifically I am trying to make the polyhedral cages water-soluble to improve their host-guest chemistry by exploiting the hydrophobic effect to drive guests into the hydrophobic cavities in water; and I am learning about two-photon excitation of metal complexes and trying to use it to develop luminescent probes that emit in the visible region following excitation in the infra-red region.

Mike Ward is Professor of Inorganic Chemistry and head of the department of chemistry at the University of Sheffield where he has been since 2003; before that he spent 13 years in Bristol. His research interests cover many aspects of the coordination and supramolecular chemistry of metal complexes, including selfassembly processes and the structural and photophysical properties of metal complex assemblies. Mike was also a member of the Dalton Transactions Editorial Board from 2003 and 2005.

More information on Mike and his research can be found on his website.

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Dalton Transactions Issue 7 Now Published

Dalton Transactions issue 7 coverView the latest issue of Dalton Transactions or read this week’s cover article, a Paper by Ingo Krossing and colleagues from Albert-Ludwigs-Universität, Freiburg, on the preparation of four new trihalocarbenium salts by a silver salt metathesis route.

Cover article:

CCl3+ and CBr3+ salts with the [Al(ORF)4] and [(FRO)3Al–F–Al(ORF)3] anions
(RF = C(CF3)3)

Anna J. Lehner, Nils Trapp, Harald Scherer and Ingo Krossing
Dalton Trans., 2011, 40, 1448-1452
DOI: 10.1039/C0DT01076F, Paper

c0dt01076f-ga

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Perspective: Microwave synthesis of MOFs

Microwave synthesis of MOFs

Microwave heating used in organic chemistry for decades has only recently been applied to Metal–Organic Frameworks (MOF). 
 
In this Dalton Transactions Perspective, Klinowski and co-workers clearly describe the advantages of using microwave synthesis to prepare a range of coordination network materials: short reaction times, fast kinetics of crystal nucleation and growth, and high yields of desirable products which can be isolated with few or no secondary products.  The growth of nano-sized crystallites which may find direct applications in functional devices is highlighted.

Read more at:

Microwave-Assisted Synthesis of Metal–Organic Frameworks  Jacek Klinowski, Filipe A. Almeida Paz, Patrícia Silva and João Rocha
Dalton Trans., 2011, 40, 321-330
DOI: 10.1039/C0DT00708K, Perspective

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Call for Papers: Pincers and other hemilabile ligands

Dalton Transactions is delighted to announce an upcoming themed issue entitled Pincers and other hemilabile ligands, with guest editors Bert Klein Gebbink and Gerard van Koten. It is our pleasure to invite you to contribute to this themed issue.

Deadline for Submission: 18th February 2011

The field of pincer ligands, and the application of pincer metal complexes in e.g. homogeneous catalysis and synthesis, is currently more active than ever before. Since the pioneering work in the 1970s on classical PCP- and NCN-pincer metal complexes, the chemistry of pincer complexes has developed from structural organometallic chemistry and the trapping and isolation of putative reaction intermediates to applications of pincer complexes in all fields of science not limited to chemistry only and including e.g. chemical biology, materials science, and medicine. One can now truly speak about pincers as being among the ‘privileged ligands’ in transition metal chemistry.

This themed issue aims to grasp the current momentum in pincer chemistry and hopes to bring together contributions from experts in the field, involved in either the fundamental development of new pincer manifolds or in the multidisciplinary application of these organometallic entities, and any pincer-related chemistry anywhere in between these facets. We are aiming to highlight contributions from leading experts of the field in this issue.  All types of manuscript, Communications, Full Papers, Frontiers and Perspectives, will be considered for publication.

The manuscript should be prepared according to the format for regular articles and will be subjected to the normal refereeing procedure. Manuscripts should be submitted no later than 18th February 2011 by using the web submissions service. Please indicate on submission that your manuscript is intended for this themed issue. Please direct any questions to the Dalton Transactions Editorial Office.

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Top Ten most-read Dalton Transactions articles in December

Read the most-read Dalton Transactions articles of December 2010, listed below:

C. N. R. Rao and Manashi Nath, Dalton Trans., 2003, 1-24
DOI: 10.1039/B208990B
 
Ming-Xing Yang, Li-Juan Chen, Shen Lin, Xiao-Hua Chen and Hua Huang, Dalton Trans., 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0DT00781A
 
C. N. R. Rao, S. R. C. Vivekchand, Kanishka Biswas and A. Govindaraj, Dalton Trans., 2007, 3728-3749
DOI: 10.1039/B708342D
 
Hai-Yan Liu, Hua Wu, Jian-Fang Ma, Ying-Ying Liu, Jin Yang and Ji-Cheng Ma, Dalton Trans., 2011, 40, 602-613
DOI: 10.1039/C0DT01024C
 
Holger Braunschweig and Rian D. Dewhurst, Dalton Trans., 2011, 40, 549-558
DOI: 10.1039/C0DT01181A
 
P. P. Edwards, A. Porch, M. O. Jones, D. V. Morgan and R. M. Perks, Dalton Trans., 2004, 2995-3002
DOI: 10.1039/B408864F
 
Bart M. J. M. Suijkerbuijk, Bas N. H. Aerts, Harm P. Dijkstra, Martin Lutz, Anthony L. Spek, Gerard van Koten and Robertus J. M. Klein Gebbink, Dalton Trans., 2007, 1273-1276
DOI: 10.1039/B701978P
 
Deborah L. Kays, Dalton Trans., 2011, 40, 769-778
DOI: 10.1039/C0DT01247E
 
Ye Peng, Teng Ben, Jun Xu, Ming Xue, Xiaofei Jing, Feng Deng, Shilun Qiu and Guangshan Zhu, Dalton Trans., 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0DT01268H
 
Jacek Klinowski, Filipe A. Almeida Paz, Patrícia Silva and João Rocha, Dalton Trans., 2011, 40, 321-330
DOI: 10.1039/C0DT00708K

To keep up-to-date with all the best inorganic research articles, sign up for the journal’s e-alerts here.

 

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Nominations welcome for RSC Awards

Do you know someone who has advanced research in inorganic chemistry by developing new organometallic compounds or providing vital insight into catalytic processes? The RSC Prizes and Awards recognise achievements by individuals, teams and organisations. There are over 60 Prizes and Awards available, covering all areas of the chemical sciences. 

Nomination is quick and easy using our online system and you can nominate yourself or a colleague. The closing date for nominations is 31 January 2011 so please don’t wait.

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FREE Chemistry World Webinar

Chemistry World are hosting the first Chemistry World webinar on 31 January. This will include an active audience in Burlington House and be FREE to watch online.

Find out more by reading the blog, and to find out how to register.

Connecting Chemistry and Mass Spectrometry on the Internet – ChemSpider
Monday 31 January 2011

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Dalton Transactions Issue 5 Now Published

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Check out this week’s issue of Dalton Transactions, where the outside cover displays work by Nils Metzler-Nolte and colleagues, from Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany. In their paper they make a ruthenium Tp sandwich bioconjugate, with a structure reminescent of a scorpion.

View the issue, or read the research…

Outside cover article:

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Microwave-assisteTpRu(p-(CO-Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Leu-OH)-C6H4Tp) as the first example of a ruthenium Tp sandwich bioconjugated synthesis of the Tp sandwich compound TpRu(p-Br-C6H4Tp) and application of its benzoic acid derivative TpRu(p-(CO2H)-C6H4Tp) in the covalent labelling of biomolecules
Johannes Zagermann, Mariusz Molon and Nils Metzler-Nolte
Dalton Trans., 2011, 40, 1011-1015
DOI: 10.1039/C0DT01121E, Communication

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Perspective: Conversions between metal–ligand multiple bond types

In this Dalton Transactions Perspective, Aaron Odom from Michigan State University examines single-step methods for the conversion of one type of metal-ligand multiple bond to another. These reactions have a wide variety of applications in organic synthesis, e.g. in carbonyl olefination.

The Perspective includes recent examples from the author’s own laboratory on metallacycles prepared directly from an imido ligand.

Read more: Conversions between metal-ligand multiple bond (MLMB) types: carbonyl olefination and other applications
Aaron L. Odom
Dalton Trans., 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0DT00825G, Perspective

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Infinite winding water chain

Syntheses, structures and properties of two unusual silver–organic coordination networks: 1D-1D tubular intertwinement and existence of an infinite winding water chain
Bo Li, Shuang-Quan Zang, Can Ji, Chen-Xia Du, Hong-Wei Hou and Thomas C. W. Mak
Dalton Trans., 2011, 40, 788-792
Cover article – Check out the science behind the art of our most recent cover for Dalton Transactions, volume 40, issue 4 

Two new silver(I) coordination polymers have been constructed from the flexible H3btc and
bridging bpy ligands under different conditions. The results indicate that different coordination modes play a vital role in the assembly of supramolecular architectures. The new polymers represent the  first example of 1D-1D parallel interpenetrated tubular chains in a coordination polymer, and a double-ladder structure, in which an infinite winding water chain has been identified

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