Dalton Transactions’ highest cited papers in 2022

As part of our Dalton Transactions up-and-coming articles web collection, we want to highlight our highest cited articles for 2022 (those published in 2021 with the highest number of citations in 2022) from various research areas within inorganic chemistry.

This web collection brings together articles that made waves in the inorganic chemistry community in 2022. These are Dalton Transactions’ top 1% highest cited or most downloaded articles in 2022.

Check out the full list of our highest cited articles in the table below (in order of descending number of citations*):

Title  Year   Citations*
Recent progress on pristine two-dimensional metal-organic frameworks as active components in supercapacitors 2021 54
  OctaDist: a tool for calculating distortion parameters in spin crossover and coordination complexes 2021 51
  Promoting urea oxidation and water oxidation through interface construction on a CeO2@CoFe2O4 heterostructure 2021 42
  Recent advances in metal-organic framework-based electrode materials for supercapacitors 2021 40
  Recent advances in molecular logic gate chemosensors based on luminescent metal organic frameworks 2021 40
  Recent advances in metal-organic frameworks as adsorbent materials for hazardous dye molecules 2021 37
  A new magnetic adsorbent of eggshell-zeolitic imidazolate framework for highly efficient removal of norfloxacin 2021 34
  A review of the recent progress on heterogeneous catalysts for Knoevenagel condensation 2021 32
  A novel Cr3+-doped Lu2CaMg2Si3O12 garnet phosphor with broadband emission for near-infrared applications 2021 32
  Highlights of the development and application of luminescent lanthanide based coordination polymers, MOFs and functional nanomaterials 2021 30
  A robust 3D zinc(II)-organic framework for efficient dual detection of acetylacetone and Tb3+ ions 2021 25
  Luminescent metal-organic frameworks as chemical sensors based on “mechanism-response”: a review 2021 23
  Recent strategies to improve the photoactivity of metal-organic frameworks 2021 23
  ESIPT-AIE active Schiff base based on 2-(2 ‘-hydroxyphenyl)benzo-thiazole applied as multi-functional fluorescent chemosensors 2021 23
  Molecular assemblies from linear-shaped Ln(4) clusters to Ln(8) clusters using different beta-diketonates: disparate magnetocaloric effects and single-molecule magnet behaviours 2021 23
  Recent progresses in luminescent metal-organic frameworks (LMOFs) as sensors for the detection of anions and cations in aqueous solution 2021 22
  A review on the recently developed promising infrared nonlinear optical materials 2021 22
  Synthesis and control strategies of nanomaterials for photoelectrochemical water splitting 2021 22
  Organoselenium ligands for heterogeneous and nanocatalytic systems: development and applications 2021 22
  A water-stable multi-responsive luminescent Zn-MOF sensor for detecting TNP, NZF and Cr2O72- in aqueous media 2021 20
  Selective construction and stability studies of a molecular trefoil knot and Solomon link 2021 20

*citation data according to Scopus

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Dalton Transactions’ most downloaded papers from 2022

We are delighted to announce our new web collection: Dalton Transactions up-and-coming articles

This web collection brings together articles that made waves in the inorganic chemistry community in 2022. These are Dalton Transactions’ top 1% highest cited or most downloaded articles in 2022.

See the full collection on our collection webpage, and check out a selection of the most downloaded articles below:


Hydrogen-atom and oxygen-atom transfer reactivities of iron(iv)-oxo complexes of quinoline-substituted pentadentate ligands (Open Access)

Sandip Munshi, Arup Sinha, Solomon Yiga, Sridhar Banerjee, Reena Singh, Md. Kamal Hossain, Matti Haukka, Andrei Felipe Valiati, Ricardo Dagnoni Huelsmann, Edmar Martendal, Rosely Peralta, Fernando Xavier Ola F. Wendt, Tapan K. Paine and Ebbe Nordlander

Dalton Trans., 2022, 51, 870-884

John Dalton – the man and the myth (Open Access)

Edwin C. Constable

Dalton Trans., 2022, 51, 768-776

Photoinduced Jahn–Teller switch in Mn(iii) terpyridine complexes (Open Access)

Kyle Barlow, Julien Eng, Iona Ivalo, Marco Coletta, Euan K. Brechin, Thomas J. Penfold and J. Olof Johansson

Dalton Trans., 2022, 51, 10751-10757

Influence of the spatial distribution of copper sites on the selectivity of the oxygen reduction reaction (Open Access)

N. W. G. Smits, D. Rademaker, A. I. Konovalov, M. A. Siegler and D. G. H. Hetterscheid

Dalton Trans., 2022, 51, 1206-1215

Ruthenium-nitrosyl complexes as NO-releasing molecules, potential anticancer drugs, and photoswitches based on linkage isomerism (Open Access)

Iryna Stepanenko, Michal Zalibera, Dominik Schaniel, Joshua Telser and Vladimir B. Arion

Dalton Trans., 2022, 51, 5367-5393

CO2 capture from ambient air via crystallization with tetraalkylammonium hydroxides (Open Access)

Manish Kumar Mishra, Volodymyr Smetana, Ethan A. Hiti, Hannah B. Wineinger, Fengrui Qu, Anja-Verena Mudring and  Robin D. Rogers

Dalton Trans., 2022, 51, 17724-17732

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Dalton Transactions welcomes new Associate Editor Neal Mankad

We are delighted to welcome our new Associate Editor Professor Neal Mankad to the Dalton Transactions Editorial Board!

Neal P. Mankad received his S.B. in chemistry from MIT in 2004 after having conducted undergraduate research with Prof. Joseph P. Sadighi on copper N-heterocyclic carbene complexes. In 2010, Neal earned a Ph.D. in inorganic chemistry from Caltech as an NSF graduate research fellow under the supervision of Prof. Jonas C. Peters, working on biomimetic and bioinspired complexes of copper and iron. During 2010-2012, he was an NIH postdoctoral research fellow at the University of California, Berkeley, with Prof. F. Dean Toste studying fundamental organometallic chemistry of gold.

Since 2012, Neal has been an independent faculty member in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Illinois Chicago (UIC), where his group focuses on synthetic inorganic and organometallic systems relevant to chemical sustainability. Selected research awards earned by Neal include the Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship and the NIH Maximizing Investigators’ Research Award (MIRA). He has also gained distinction for excellence in teaching, including by the UIC Teaching Recognition Program.

Find out more about Neal on his website and submit your article to him today!

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HOT Articles – Online now and free to access

Dalton Transactions, Royal Society of Chemistry

We have updated our reviewer recommended ‘HOT articles’ for 2023.

We update our HOT articles collection quarterly and make the selected articles free to access until 22 May 2023! This collection represents the top 10% of research published in Dalton Transactions between January – March 2023.

Make the most of the free to access period by browsing the collection today!

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HOT Articles – Online now and free to access

Dalton Transactions, Royal Society of Chemistry

We have updated our reviewer recommended ‘HOT articles’ for 2022.

We update our HOT articles collection quarterly and make the selected articles free to access until 20 February 2023! This collection represents the top 10% of research published in Dalton Transactions between October – December 2022.

Make the most of the free to access period by browsing the collection today!

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HOT Articles – Online now and free to access

Dalton Transactions, Royal Society of Chemistry

We have updated our reviewer recommended ‘HOT articles’ for 2022.

We update our HOT articles collection quarterly and make the selected articles free to access until 18 November 2022! This collection represents the top 10% of research published in Dalton Transactions between July – September 2022.

Make the most of the free to access period by browsing the collection today!

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HOT Articles – Online now and free to access

Dalton Transactions, Royal Society of Chemistry

We have updated our reviewer recommended ‘HOT articles’ for 2021.

We update our HOT articles collection quarterly and make the selected articles free to access until 18 February 2022! This collection represents the top 10% of research published in Dalton Transactions between October – December 2021.

Make the most of the free to access period by browsing the collection today!

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Dalton turns 50 – celebrating our board members past and present

We are delighted to announce our new themed collection: Dalton turns 50 – celebrating our board members past and present.

2021 is a huge milestone for Dalton Transactions – the publication of its 50th volume! Since its launch in 1972—then named Journal of the Chemical Society, Dalton Transactions—the journal has published over 45,000 articles featuring contributions from over 100 countries across six continents. Dalton Transactions is a truly international journal with an international readership and this global reach is a result of the work of our many editorial and advisory board members over the years.

This themed collection, part of our 50th volume celebrations, celebrates the high quality research published in Dalton Transactions authored by our board members past and present. The breadth and diversity of the field of inorganic chemistry is illustrated by this collection, as well as the new avenues being explored. This collection is guest edited by our current Dalton Transactions Editorial Board Chair, Professor Russell Morris (University of St Andrews), and the Executive Editor, Dr Andrew Shore (Royal Society of Chemistry).

See the full collection as it grows on our collection webpage, and check out a selection of articles below:


 

 

The influence of alkyl chains on the performance of DSCs employing iron(II) N-heterocyclic carbene sensitizers (Open Access)

Mariia Becker, Vanessa Wyss, Catherine E. Housecroft and Edwin C. Constable*
Dalton Trans., 2021, 50, 16961-16969

 

 

 

Graphical abstract: Selective construction and stability studies of a molecular trefoil knot and Solomon link

 

Selective construction and stability studies of a molecular trefoil knot and Solomon link

Li-Long Dang,* Ting-Ting Li, Zheng Cui, Dong Sui, Lu-Fang Ma and Guo-Xin Jin*
Dalton Trans., 2021, 50, 16984-16989

 

 

Graphical abstract: Getting a lead on Pb2+-amide chelators for 203/212Pb radiopharmaceuticalsGetting a lead on Pb2+-amide chelators for 203/212Pb radiopharmaceuticals

Aidan Ingham, Thomas I. Kostelnik, Brooke L. McNeil, Brian O. Patrick, Neha Choudhary,  María de Guadalupe Jaraquemada-Peláez and Chris Orvig*
Dalton Trans., 2021, 50, 11579-11595

 

 

Graphical abstract: Reactivity of a T-shaped cobalt(i) pincer-complex

 

Reactivity of a T-shaped cobalt(I) pincer-complex

Regina Matveeva, Clemens K. Blasius, Hubert Wadepohl and Lutz H. Gade*
Dalton Trans., 2021, 50, 6802-6810

 

 

Graphical abstract: From polygons to polyhedra through intermediate structures. A shape measures study of six-atom inorganic rings and clusters

 

From polygons to polyhedra through intermediate structures. A shape measures study of six-atom inorganic rings and clusters (Open Access)

Santiago Alvarez
Dalton Trans., 2021, 50, 17101-17119

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Tin: Modern chemistry of an element from antiquity

We are delighted to announce our new themed collection on Tin: Modern chemistry of an element from antiquity.

This themed collection is part of our 50th volume celebrations and focuses on the inorganic, metal-organic and organometallic chemistry of the heavier Group 14 element, tin, as the 50th element in the periodic table.

As an element, tin has been exploited by humanity for over 5000 years, since it was realised that its alloy with copper provided an even more durable material, bronze. In more recent times, and throughout the half century of Dalton Transactions, tin has played, and continues to occupy, a central role in the development of many of our current perspectives on the bonding and application of the whole gamut of main group element chemistry.

Guest edited by Professor Mike Hill (University of Bath) and Professor John McGrady (University of Oxford), this collection of reports reflects our prevailing interest in an element that has played a central role not only in the development of modern chemistry but in human history. Both of the commonly accessible (II) and (IV) oxidation states are represented by this compendium of reports, which span fundamental studies of bonding and structure to emerging applications in small molecule activation, catalysis and materials science.

Professor Mike Hill

Professor John McGrady

See the full collection as it grows on our collection webpage, and check out a selection of articles below:


Graphical abstract: Reactions of a diborylstannylene with CO2 and N2O: diboration of carbon dioxide by a main group bis(boryl) complex

Reactions of a diborylstannylene with CO2 and N2O: diboration of carbon dioxide by a main group bis(boryl) complex

Andrey V. Protchenko, M. Ángeles Fuentes, Jamie Hicks,  Caitilín McManus, Rémi Tirfoin and Simon Aldridge*
Dalton Trans., 2021, 50, 9059-9067

 

 

Graphical abstract: Tin(iv) fluoride complexes with neutral phosphine coordination and comparisons with hard N- and O-donor ligands

Tin(IV) fluoride complexes with neutral phosphine coordination and comparisons with hard N- and O-donor ligands

Rhys P. King, Madeleine S. Woodward,  Julian Grigg, Graeme McRobbie, William Levason and Gillian Reid*
Dalton Trans., 2021, 50, 14400-14410

 

 

 

Graphical abstract: Hydroboration of carbonyls and imines by an iminophosphonamido tin(ii) precatalystHydroboration of carbonyls and imines by an iminophosphonamido tin(II) precatalyst

Kazuki Nakaya, Shintaro Takahashi, Akihiko Ishii, Kajjana Boonpalit, Panida Surawatanawong* and Norio Nakata*
Dalton Trans., 2021, 50, 14810-14819

 

 

 

Graphical abstract: Bulky arene-bridged bis(amide) and bis(amidinate) complexes of germanium(ii) and tin(ii)Bulky arene-bridged bis(amide) and bis(amidinate) complexes of germanium(II) and tin(II)

Palak Garg, Deepak Dange and Cameron Jones*
Dalton Trans., 2021, 50, 9118-9122

 

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Register now for the Dalton New Talent: Americas Desktop Seminar

We are delighted to announce our next Desktop Seminar in our New Talent series! Dalton Transactions is providing an opportunity for emerging investigators to present, discuss and showcase their inorganic chemistry research based on our popular New Talent series of themed issues.

The next desktop seminar is based on our 2020 themed issue, New Talent: Americas – attendance is free and registration is now open.

The seminar will be held on December 2, 2021 and will be chaired by Dalton Transactions Associate Editor, Professor Christine Thomas. The talks will cover a wide spectrum of topics within inorganic chemistry, including organometallic chemistry, main group chemistry and inorganic materials.

 

Speakers: 

 

Professor Cynthia L M Pereira

Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil

Talk Title: Mononuclear lanthanide(III) complexes containing oxamate ligands: synthesis, photophysical and magnetic properties

To find out more about Professor Pereira’s work, check out her article in the New Talent: Americas themed issue on Mononuclear lanthanide(III)-oxamate complexes as new photoluminescent field-induced single-molecule magnets: solid-state photophysical and magnetic properties

 

Graphical abstract: Mononuclear lanthanide(iii)-oxamate complexes as new photoluminescent field-induced single-molecule magnets: solid-state photophysical and magnetic properties
 
Professor David Herbert

University of Manitoba, Canada

Talk Title: Exploiting Ligand C=N Units in Molecular Materials Chemistry

To find out more about Professor Herbert’s work, check out his article in the New Talent: Americas themed issue on Zn-Templated synthesis of substituted (2,6-diimine)pyridine proligands and evaluation of their iron complexes as anolytes for flow battery applications

 

Graphical abstract: Zn-Templated synthesis of substituted (2,6-diimine)pyridine proligands and evaluation of their iron complexes as anolytes for flow battery applications
 
Professor Rebekka Klausen

Johns Hopkins University, USA

Talk Title: Fragments of crystalline silicon via target-oriented synthesis

To find out more about Professor Klausen’s work, check out her article in the New Talent: Americas themed issue on: Reductive halocyclosilazane polymerization  

 

Register now to attend these exciting talks!

 

Future desktop seminars will include more speakers from our 2020 themed issue, New Talent: Americas, as well as our other recent New Talent issues so watch this space for more details or sign up to our newsletter!  

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