Archive for July, 2024

Tianbao Ma joins the RSC Mechanochemistry Advisory Board

RSC Mechanochemistry is delighted to welcome Tianbao Ma (Tsinghua University, China) to its Advisory Board.

Read some of their recent publications:

 

Revealing the low-temperature friction behavior and mechanisms of hydrogenated amorphous carbon films with Al/Cr/Si doping

Quansheng Ma, Chengjun Huang, Wei Cai, Jiaxu Zhang, Weiqi Chen, Jie Jin, Yuan Xia, Yi Xu and Tianbao Ma

Tribol. Int. 2024, 198, 109911

 

Observing and Modeling the Wear Process of Heterogeneous Interface

Xin Tang, Aisheng Song, Haijun Wu, Kaili Feng, Tianmin Shao and Tianbao Ma

Nano Lett. 2024, 24, 6965-6973

 

Interfacial tribochemical kinetics: A new perspective on superlubricity of diamond-like carbon films

Weiqi Chen and Tianbao Ma

Sci. China Technol. Sci. 2024, 67, 2050-2052

 

 

RSC Mechanochemistry offers you an inclusive and dedicated home for the ideas, scientific language and approaches that cut across the many disciplines mechanochemistry touches. Here we are seeking to build knowledge, as well as foster innovation and discovery at this forefront of chemistry. Whether you are seeking to understand the fundamentals of mechanochemistry, or you are excited by its applications and potential, this journal is for you.

 

Hear from our authors: Bernardo Castro Dominguez

RSC Mechanochemistry has published its first articles. To celebrate this, we asked the authors to discuss their work in some more detail.

 

In this edition, we hear from Bernardo Castro Dominguez about their study titled Mechanochemical extraction of edible proteins from moor grass.

 

Want to know more about their work? Read the full paper here!

Mechanochemical extraction of edible proteins from moor grass

Olusegun Abayomi Olalere, Fatma Guler, Christopher J. Chuck, Hannah S. Leese and Bernardo Castro-Dominguez

RSC Mechanochem. 2024, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/D4MR00016A

 

 

  RSC Mechanochemistry offers you an inclusive and dedicated home for the ideas, scientific language and approaches that cut across the many disciplines mechanochemistry touches. Here we are seeking to build knowledge, as well as foster innovation and discovery at this forefront of chemistry. Whether you are seeking to understand the fundamentals of mechanochemistry, or you are excited by its applications and potential, this journal is for you.

 

 

Watch back: 2024 RSC Mechanochemistry Showcase webinar

Did you miss it?

Watch back the 2024 RSC Mechanochemistry Showcase any time via:

 

RSC Mechanochemistry is the first journal entirely dedicated to the study of mechanical forces in chemistry and the central role of mechanochemistry in many other disciplines.

Chaired by Editors-in-Chief James Batteas and Tomislav Friščić, our Showcase featured the RSC Mechanochemistry Editorial Board discussing their vision for the journal and board members showcasing selected articles from the research already published, including:

  • “What makes every work perfect is cooking and grinding”: the ancient roots of mechanochemistry, RSC Mechanochem., 2024, 1, 123-129, DOI: D3MR00035D
  • Total Mechano-synthesis of 2-Cyclopropyl-4-(4-Fluorophenyl) Quinoline-3-Acrylaldehyde—A Pivotal intermediate of Pitavastatin, RSC Mechanochem., 2024, Accepted Manuscript, DOI: D4MR00036F
  • Revealing the mechanism of reductive, mechanochemical Li recycling from LiFePO4, RSC Mechanochem., 2024, Advance Article, DOI: D4MR00014E
  • Diverse metastable diarylacetonitrile radicals generated by polymer mechanochemistry, RSC Mechanochem., 2024, 1, 181-188, DOI: D3MR00031A
  • Enhanced HP1α homodimer interaction via force-induced salt bridge formation: implications for chromatin crosslinking and phase separation, RSC Mechanochem., 2024, 1, 78-93, DOI: D3MR00011G

The event was first broadcast live on 11 July 2024 via RSC YouTube and LinkedIn.

Find out more about RSC Mechanochemistry on our journal website (rsc.li/RSCMechanochem), and stay up to date by signing up for our e-alerts now.