Call for papers for our Spotlight Collection: MOF Sensors

We are delighted to share with you our Spotlight Collection on MOF Sensors.

This Spotlight Collection is guest edited by Dalton Transactions Associate Editor Takashi Uemura (University of Tokyo).

Does your research fit into this subject area? If so, we would welcome your contribution.

 

Submit your research now

 

About the Spotlight Collection

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), comprised of metal ions and bridging organic ligands, have emerged as an important family of porous materials. Owing to their highly porous structures with functional properties, MOFs are considered as one of the most ideal materials for chemical sensors as the sensing properties are strongly influenced by surface interaction between analyte molecules and pore walls of MOFs. The application of MOFs covers the fields of sensing toward a variety of target compounds, including gases, solvents, explosives, ions, pollutions, and biological molecules. This spotlight collection focuses on the latest studies on MOF-based sensors published in Dalton Transactions, showing highly sensitive detections and the future research directions using MOFs with respect to general sensing principles and analytical performance.

Articles will be added to this open and on-going spotlight collection as soon as possible after they are published. You can find a selection of the articles below and check out the growing collection online here:

 

Graphical abstract: First Ln-MOF as a trifunctional luminescent probe for the efficient sensing of aspartic acid, Fe3+ and DMSOFirst Ln-MOF as a trifunctional luminescent probe for the efficient sensing of aspartic acid, Fe3+ and DMSO
Dongdong Yang, Liping Lu,* Sisi Feng and Miaoli Zhu*
Dalton Trans., 2020, 49, 7514-7524

 

 

Graphical abstract: Engineering design toward exploring the functional group substitution in 1D channels of Zn–organic frameworks upon nitro explosives and antibiotics detectionEngineering design toward exploring the functional group substitution in 1D channels of Zn–organic frameworks upon nitro explosives and antibiotics detection
Zhan Zhou, Min-Le Han, Hong-Ru Fu, Lu-Fang Ma,* Feng Luo and Dong-Sheng Li*
Dalton Trans., 2018, 47, 5359-5365

 

 

Graphical abstract: The effect of functional groups in the aqueous-phase selective sensing of Fe(iii) ions by thienothiophene-based zirconium metal–organic frameworks and the design of molecular logic gatesThe effect of functional groups in the aqueous-phase selective sensing of Fe(III) ions by thienothiophene-based zirconium metal–organic frameworks and the design of molecular logic gates
Rana Dalapati, Ülkü Kökçam-Demir, Christoph Janiak and Shyam Biswas*
Dalton Trans., 2018, 47, 1159-1170

 

 

 

How to submit:

All types of manuscript – communications, full papers, perspective, frontiers and comments – will be considered for publication. The manuscript should be prepared according to our article guidelines and submitted via our online system.

All manuscripts will be subject to the usual initial assessment and peer review processes as necessary, and inclusion in the Spotlight Collection will be at the discretion of the Guest Editors. Please indicate in your submission that you are submitting to the Spotlight Collection.

 

Interested in submitting a paper? Please contact us for more information.

 

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Call for papers for our Spotlight Collection: 2D Materials Chemistry

We are delighted to share with you our Spotlight Collection on 2D Materials Chemistry.

This Spotlight Collection is guest edited by Dalton Transactions Associate Editor Li-Min Zheng (Nanjing University) alongside Eugenio Coronado (University of Valencia) and Hua Zhang (City University of Hong Kong).

Does your research fit into this subject area? If so, we would welcome your contribution.

 

Submit your research now

 

About the Spotlight Collection

Two-dimensional (2D) materials have fascinated scientists for more than a decade. While most work has been devoted to inorganic systems, there has been a distinct increase in metal-organic 2D materials. This themed collection will provide a brief overview of the latest developments of the inorganic and metal-organic 2D materials. It covers everything from synthetic strategies, chemical design, the variety of electronic, chemical and optical properties to applications in catalysis, sensors, energy storage and conversion, electronics and other related areas.

Articles will be added to this open and on-going spotlight collection as soon as possible after they are published. You can find a selection of the articles below and check out the growing collection online here:

 

Graphical abstract: Two-dimensional MAX-derived titanate nanostructures for efficient removal of Pb(ii)Two-dimensional MAX-derived titanate nanostructures for efficient removal of Pb(II)
Pengcheng Gu, Sai Zhang, Chenlu Zhang, Xiangxue Wang, Ayub Khan,  Tao Wen,* Baowei Hu,* Ahmed Alsaedi, Tasawar Hayat and Xiangke Wang*
Dalton Trans., 2019, 48, 2100-2107

 

 

Graphical abstract: Few-layered MoSe2 nanosheets as an advanced electrode material for supercapacitorsFew-layered MoSe2 nanosheets as an advanced electrode material for supercapacitors
Suresh Kannan Balasingam, Jae Sung Lee and Yongseok Jun*
Dalton Trans., 2015, 44, 15491-15498

 

 

Graphical abstract: Neutral ligand TIPA-based two 2D metal–organic frameworks: ultrahigh selectivity of C2H2/CH4 and efficient sensing and sorption of Cr(vi )Neutral ligand TIPA-based two 2D metal–organic frameworks: ultrahigh selectivity of C2H2/CHand efficient sensing and sorption of Cr(VI)
Hong-Ru Fu, Ying Zhao, Zhan Zhou, Xiao-Gang Yang and Lu-Fang Ma*
Dalton Trans., 2018, 47, 3725-3732

 

 

 

How to submit:

All types of manuscript – communications, full papers, perspective, frontiers and comments – will be considered for publication. The manuscript should be prepared according to our article guidelines and submitted via our online system.

All manuscripts will be subject to the usual initial assessment and peer review processes as necessary, and inclusion in the Spotlight Collection will be at the discretion of the Guest Editors. Please indicate in your submission that you are submitting to the Spotlight Collection.

 

Interested in submitting a paper? Please contact us for more information.

 

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Call for papers for our Spotlight Collection: Lanthanide and transition metal complexes as molecular magnets

We are delighted to share with you our Spotlight Collection on Lanthanide and transition metal complexes as molecular magnets.

This Spotlight Collection is guest edited by Dalton Transactions Associate Editor Vadapalli Chandrasekhar (Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur).

Does your research fit into this subject area? If so, we would welcome your contribution.

 

Submit your research now

 

About the Spotlight Collection

The research area of molecule-based magnets encompassing single-molecule magnets (SMMs), single-ion magnets (SIMs) and single-chain magnets (SCMs) has been extremely active in recent years. This field is truly interdisciplinary and the advances in this field have been possible only due to a concerted effort from synthetic coordination- and organometallic chemists, physicists, materials scientists, and theoreticians. Research in this field is driven by both academic curiosity as well as the possibility of finding exotic applications such as high-density information to quantum computation. While many challenges remain to be overcome before the potential of these new materials can be realized, there has been substantial progress both in the design and assembly of these new systems as well as in understanding of their properties. This appears to be an appropriate time to bring out a special edition of Dalton Transactions on this multi-disciplinary subject.

Articles will be added to this open and on-going spotlight collection as soon as possible after they are published. You can find a selection of the articles below and check out the growing collection online here:

 

Graphical abstract: Conducting single-molecule magnet materialsConducting single-molecule magnet materials
Goulven Cosquer, Yongbing Shen, Manuel Almeida and Masahiro Yamashita*
Dalton Trans., 2018, 47, 7616-7627

 

 

 

Graphical abstract: Slow magnetic relaxation in penta-coordinate cobalt(ii) field-induced single-ion magnets (SIMs) with easy-axis magnetic anisotropySlow magnetic relaxation in penta-coordinate cobalt(ii) field-induced single-ion magnets (SIMs) with easy-axis magnetic anisotropy
Salah S. Massoud,* Zoe E. Perez, Jessica R. Courson, Roland C. Fischer, Franz A. Mautner, Ján Vančo, Michal Čajan and Zdeněk Trávníček*
Dalton Trans., 2020, 49, 11715-11726

 

 

Graphical abstract: A new class of DyIII-SIMs associated with a guanidine-based ligandA new class of DyIII-SIMs associated with a guanidine-based ligand
Basharat Ali, Xiao-Lei Li, Frédéric Gendron, Boris Le Guennic* and Jinkui Tang*
Dalton Trans., 2021, 50, 5146-5143

 

 

 

How to submit:

All types of manuscript – communications, full papers, perspective, frontiers and comments – will be considered for publication. The manuscript should be prepared according to our article guidelines and submitted via our online system.

All manuscripts will be subject to the usual initial assessment and peer review processes as necessary, and inclusion in the Spotlight Collection will be at the discretion of the Guest Editors. Please indicate in your submission that you are submitting to the Spotlight Collection.

Interested in submitting a paper? Please contact us for more information.

 

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Call for papers for our Spotlight Collection: Atomic and Molecular Layer Deposition

We are delighted to share with you our Spotlight Collection on Atomic and Molecular Layer Deposition. 

This Spotlight Collection is guest edited by Dalton Transactions Associate Editor Prof. Maarit Karppinen (Aalto University), Prof. Anjana Devi (Ruhr-University) and Prof. Jolien Dendooven (Ghent University).

Does your research fit into this subject area? If so, we would welcome your contribution.

 

Submit your research now

 

About the Spotlight Collection

Atomic layer deposition (ALD) has been the fastest growing thin-film technology in the semiconductor industry for the last few decades, and is applied in photovoltaics systems and displays. The industrial applications naturally concern only few prototype materials (Al2O3, HfO2, ZnO, TiO2, etc.). However, in recent years the technique has been increasingly exploited towards new application domains and new materials, driving a continued demand for new precursors.

Molecular layer deposition (MLD) is a much less exploited counterpart of ALD for purely organic thin films. Particularly interesting though is the combination of ALD and MLD for hybrid inorganic-organic materials. This combined ALD/MLD technique was introduced in 2008 and it is now strongly emerging for various new MOF-like metal-organic materials and inorganic-organic multilayer structures which are believed to open up novel application possibilities.

Articles will be added to this open and on-going spotlight collection as soon as possible after they are published. You can find a selection of the articles below and check out the growing collection online here:

 

Graphical abstract: Atomic/molecular layer deposition and electrochemical performance of dilithium 2-aminoterephthalateAtomic/molecular layer deposition and electrochemical performance of dilithium 2-aminoterephthalate
Juho Heiska, Mikko Nisula, Eeva-Leena Rautama, Antti J. Karttune and Maarit Karppinen*
Dalton Trans., 2020, 49, 1591-1599

 

Graphical abstract: A new metalorganic chemical vapor deposition process for MoS2 with a 1,4-diazabutadienyl stabilized molybdenum precursor and elemental sulfurA new metalorganic chemical vapor deposition process for MoS2 with a 1,4-diazabutadienyl stabilized molybdenum precursor and elemental sulfur
Jan-Lucas Wree, Engin Ciftyurek, David Zanders, Nils Boysen, Aleksander Kostka, Detlef Rogalla, Maren Kasischke, Andreas Ostendorf, Klaus Schierbaum and Anjana Devi*
Dalton Trans., 2020, 49, 13462-13474

 

Graphical abstract: Liquid atomic layer deposition as emergent technology for the fabrication of thin filmsLiquid atomic layer deposition as emergent technology for the fabrication of thin films
Octavio Graniel,* Josep Puigmartí-Luis* and David Muñoz-Rojas*
Dalton Trans., 2021, Advance Article

 

 

How to submit:

All types of manuscript – communications, full papers, perspective, frontiers and comments – will be considered for publication. The manuscript should be prepared according to our article guidelines and submitted via our online system.

All manuscripts will be subject to the usual initial assessment and peer review processes as necessary, and inclusion in the Spotlight Collection will be at the discretion of the Guest Editors. Please indicate in your submission that you are submitting to the Spotlight Collection.

Interested in submitting a paper? Please contact us for more information.

 

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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 24 May 2021! This collection represents the top 10% of research published in Dalton Transactions between January – March 2021.

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

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Register now for the New Talent Europe desktop seminar!

Among the immense disruption faced by the scientific community in 2020, one significant loss has been the cancellation or postponement of conferences, symposia, and other scientific meetings. Emerging investigators have been particularly effected by this, having lost the chance to present their research at a key stage in their career. Dalton Transactions, therefore, has decided to launch a desktop seminar series, aimed specifically at early career researchers and based on our popular New Talent series of themed issues.

 

The next desktop seminar is based on our 2018 themed issue, New Talent: Europe attendance is free and registration is now open.

The seminar will be held on April 23, 2021 and will be chaired by Dalton Transactions Editorial Board Member, Professor Marinella Mazzanti. The talks will cover a wide spectrum of topics within inorganic chemistry, including metal-organic frameworks, bioinorganic chemistry, and organometallic chemistry.

 

Speakers: 

 

Professor Wendy Lee Queen

EPFL Switzerland

Talk Title: Realizing the global benefits of the world’s most porous materials

To find out more about Professor Queen’s work, check out her article in the New Talent: Europe themed issue on Selective CO2 adsorption by a new metal–organic framework: synergy between open metal sites and a charged imidazolinium backbone.

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Dr Nicola Farrer

University of Oxford, UK

Talk Title: Metals in medicine: challenges and opportunities

To find out more about Dr Farrer’s work, check out her article in the New Talent: Europe themed issue on Platinum(iv) azido complexes undergo copper-free click reactions with alkynes.

 

 

 

 

Dr Clément Camp

CNRS, Université Lyon 1, France

Talk Title: Cooperative Heterobimetallic C-H bond Activations at Supported Tantalum/Iridium Pair-site Catalysts

To find out more about Dr Camp’s work, check out his recent article: Mechanistic investigations via DFT support the cooperative heterobimetallic C–H and O–H bond activation across Ta[double bond, length as m-dash]Ir multiple bonds.

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Register now to attend these exciting talks!

https://www.rsc.org/events/detail/46391/dalton-transactions-new-talent-europe 

 

Future desktop seminars will include more speakers from our 2018 themed issue, New Talent: Europe, as well as our 2020 themed issue, New Talent: Americas, so watch this space for more details or sign up to our newsletter!  

 

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HOT Articles – Online now and free to access

Dalton Transactions, Royal Society of Chemistry

We have updated our ‘HOT articles’ for the last quarter of 2020.

We update our HOT articles collection quarterly and make the selected articles free to access until 18 February 2021! This collection represents the top 10% of research published in Dalton Transactions between October – December 2020.

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

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Register now for the Dalton Transactions New Talent: Asia-Pacific desktop seminar

Among the immense disruption faced by the scientific community in 2020, one significant loss has been the cancellation or postponement of conferences, symposia, and other scientific meetings. Emerging investigators have been particularly effected by this, having lost the chance to present their research at a key stage in their career. Dalton Transactions, therefore, has decided to launch a desktop seminar series, aimed specifically at early career researchers and based on our popular New Talent series of themed issues. The first of these desktop seminars is based on our 2019 themed issue, New Talent: Asia-Pacific, and registration is now open.

The seminar will be held on February 2, 2021 and will be chaired by Dalton Transactions Associate Editor, Vadapalli Chandrasekhar. The talks cover a wide spectrum of topics within inorganic chemistry, including bioinorganic chemistry, coordination chemistry, and molecular magnetism.

 

Speakers: 

 

Somdatta Ghosh-Dey

Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science, Jadavpur, Kolkata, India

Talk Title: Small Molecule Interactions with Heme and Copper bound Amyloid β peptides associated with Alzheimer’s Disease

To find out more about Professor Ghosh-Dey’s work, check out her article on Nitrite reductase activity of heme and copper bound Aβ peptides.

 

 

 

 

Tetsuro Kusamoto

Institute for Molecular Science, Japan

Talk Title: A Cu(II)-radical heterospin magnetic chain: temperature-dependent Jahn-Teller distortion correlated to π-conjugation and magnetic properties

To find out more about Professor Kusamoto’s work, check out his article on One-dimensional magnetic chain composed of CuII and polychlorinated dipyridylphenylmethyl radical: temperature-dependent Jahn–Teller distortion correlated to π-conjugation and magnetic properties.

 

 

 

 

Suzanne Neville

University of New South Wales Sydney, Australia

Talk Title: Spin crossover dinuclear complexes: ligand and guest effects

To find out more about Professor Neville’s work, check our her article on Heteroatom substitution effects in spin crossover dinuclear complexes.  

 

 

 

Register now to attend these exciting talks!

https://www.rsc.org/events/detail/45987/dalton-transactions-new-talent-asia-pacific

 

Future desktop seminars will be based on our 2018 themed issue, New Talent: Europe, and our 2020 themed issue, New Talent: Americas, so watch this space for more details or sign up to our newsletter!  

 

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Dalton Transactions New Talent: Americas

We are very pleased to present the final themed issue of 2020 entitled New Talent: Americas.

This themed issue reflects the strength and vitality of inorganic chemistry in the Americas and is guest-edited by Professors Georgii Nikonov (Brock University, Canada), Neal Mankad (University of Illinois at Chicago, USA), and Ana Maria da Costa Ferreira (University of São Paulo, Brazil). The emerging new talent from across the Americas is showcased from a broad spectrum of inorganic chemistry and highlights new perspectives on the subject.

A few select examples of the articles in this collection are shown below and are all free to access until January 15th 2021.

 

The chemical and physical properties of tetravalent lanthanides: Pr, Nd, Tb, and Dy
Thaige P. Gompa, Arun Ramanathan, Natalie T. Rice and Henry S. La Pierre
Dalton Trans., 2020, 49, 15945-15987
https://doi.org/10.1039/D0DT01400A
What is holding back the development of antiviral metallodrugs? A literature overview and implications for SARS-CoV-2 therapeutics and future viral outbreaks
Raphael E. F. de Paiva, Antônio Marçal Neto, Igor A. Santos, Ana C. G. Jardim, Pedro P. Corbi and Fernando R. G. Bergamini
Dalton Trans., 2020, 49, 16004-16033
https://doi.org/10.1039/D0DT02478C
Bis(pentafluorophenyl)phenothiazylborane – an intramolecular frustrated Lewis pair catalyst for stannane dehydrocoupling
Jordan N. Bentley, Ekadashi Pradhan, Tao Zeng and Christopher B. Caputo
Dalton Trans., 2020,49, 16054-16058
https://doi.org/10.1039/D0DT00506A
Alkali-metal- and halide-free dinuclear mixed-valent samarium and europium complexes
Nishya F. M. Mukthar, Nathan D. Schley and Gaël Ung
Dalton Trans., 2020, 49, 16059-16061
https://doi.org/10.1039/D0DT01095B
Transmembrane Cu(I) P-type ATPase pumps are electrogenic uniporters
Nisansala Abeyrathna, Sameera Abeyrathna, M. Thomas Morgan, Christoph J. Fahrni and Gabriele Meloni
Dalton Trans., 2020, 49, 16082-16094
https://doi.org/10.1039/D0DT01380C

We would be delighted if you decided to submit your primary research  to Dalton TransactionsDalton Transactions is a journal for all areas of inorganic chemistry, which encompasses the organometallic, bioinorganic and materials chemistry of the elements, with applications including synthesis, catalysis, energy conversion/storage, electrical devices and medicine. Dalton Transactions welcomes high-quality, original submissions in all of these areas and more, where the advancement of knowledge in inorganic chemistry is significant. See our author guidelines for information on our article types or find out more about the advantages of publishing in a Royal Society of Chemistry journal.

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Spotlight Collection: MOF Sensors

We are delighted to announce the launch of our newest Spotlight Collection, comprising recently published articles focusing on Metal Organic Framework Sensors, handpicked by Editorial Board Member Professor Takashi Uemura, The University of Tokyo, Japan.

Spotlight Collections are ongoing themed collections highlighting the best past and present work in Dalton Transactions. If you would like to contribute an article to this collection, please contact the Editorial Office at dalton-rsc@rsc.org with your proposed topic.

All of these articles are free to access until December 31st, 2020 and we hope you enjoy reading them.

We are pleased to invite you to submit your research to Dalton and give your work the global visibility it deserves.

Submit your research now

Selected articles:

A First Ln−MOF as a Trifunctional Luminescent Probe for Efficient Sensing of aspartic acid, Fe3+ and DMSO
Dong-Dong Yang, Liping Lu, Sisi Feng, Miaoli Zhu
Dalton Transactions, 2020, 49, 7514-7524

Two luminescent coordination polymers as highly selective and sensitive chemosensors for CrVI-anions in aqueous medium
Chen-Xue Wang, Yu-Pei Xia, Zhao-Quan Yao, Jialiang Xu, Ze Chang and Xian-He Bu
Dalton Transactions, 2019, 48, 387-394

Extraordinary sensitivity for H2S and Fe(iii) sensing in aqueous medium by Al-MIL-53-N3 metal–organic framework: in vitro and in vivo applications of H2S sensing
Aniruddha Das, Sooram Banesh, Vishal Trivedi and Shyam Biswas
Dalton Transactions, 2018, 47, 2690-2700

Read the full collection here

 Meet the Editor

Takashi Uemura obtained his PhD at Department of Polymer Chemistry, Kyoto University in 2002. He then began his academic career as Assistant Professor and Associate Professor at Department of Synthetic Chemistry and Biological Chemistry in Kyoto University. In 2018, he moved to the University of Tokyo where he holds the position of Professor. He was also a researcher of PRESTO program (2006–2010) and has been a research director for a CREST program (2013-2020) of the Japan Science and Technology Agency. He has received a number of awards, including the Chemical Society of Japan (CSJ) Award for Young Chemists, the Commendation for Science and Technology by the Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology, Kao Research Initiative Award, and JSPS Prize.

His research focuses on the preparation of synergistic nanohybrids between porous coordination compounds and polymeric materials, in particular, polymer chemistry in confined nanospaces.

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