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.

Hear from our authors: Aabiskar Bhusal

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 Aabiskar Bhusal about their study titled A hybrid density functional study on the mechanochemistry of silicon carbide nanotubes.

 

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

A hybrid density functional study on the mechanochemistry of silicon carbide nanotubes

Aabiskar Bhusal, Kapil Adhikari and Qian Sun

RSC Mechanochem. 2024, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/D4MR00043A

 

  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.

 

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    Hear from our authors: Kathleen Floyd

    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 Kathleen Floyd about their study titled The role of the milling environment on the copper-catalysed mechanochemical synthesis of tolbutamide.

     

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

    The role of the milling environment on the copper-catalysed mechanochemical synthesis of tolbutamide

    Kathleen Floyd, Lori Gonnet, Tomislav Friščić and James Batteas

    RSC Mechanochem. 2024, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/D4MR00031E

     

      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.

     

    Toni Spilfogel and Joseph Marrett win RSC Mechanochemistry and RSC Sustainability poster prizes

    RSC Mechanochemistry and RSC Sustainability were delighted to sponsor two Poster Prizes at the recent Birmingham Symposium on Mechanochemistry and Sustainability. Researchers from around the world came together during this symposium to present their latest research.

     

    RSC Mechanochemistry Assistant Editor Patrick de Jongh attended this event and presented the RSC-sponsored Poster Prizes to Toni Spilfogel and Joseph Marrett (University of Birmingham, UK). Congratulations to the prize winners!

     

    Left: John Warner, Patrick de Jongh, Toni Spilfogel and Thomas Auvray. Right: John Warner, Patrick de Jongh, Joseph Marrett and Thomas Auvray.

     

    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.

     

     

    Introducing the second issue of RSC Mechanochemistry

     

    We are delighted to present issue two of RSC Mechanochemistry, the first journal dedicated to this transformative field.

    Explore exciting new research and innovative applications across all areas of theoretical and experimental chemistry for free. RSC Mechanochemistry focuses on the publication of innovative research that advances the fundamental understanding and application of the use of mechanical force for driving and controlling chemical reactions and materials transformations in the gas, liquid, and solid states.

     

    “As part of a leading scientific society, publishing with RSC Mechanochemistry offers authors a global reach, as well as opportunities to engage with a myriad of interest groups to help foster connections and spread the word on their research. Our outstanding Associate Editors and Editorial Board provide an exceptional breath to the journal, so authors can be assured that their manuscripts are in the hands of leading experts who are dedicated to publishing their impactful science.”

    James Batteas, Co-Editor-in-Chief

    This journal will be a game-changer for mechanochemistry experts and novices alike – for the first time, authors in mechanochemistry will have the opportunity to publish their original and innovative mechanochemistry research in a dedicated journal, affiliated with a leading international chemistry publishing society.

     

    Our second issue includes:

     

    “Wash-free” synthesis of cyclodextrin metal–organic frameworks

    Shuhei Fujita, Kazunori Kadot, Atsushi Koike, Hiromasa Uchiyama, Yuichi Tozukab and Shunsuke Tanaka

    RSC Mechanochem., 2024, 1, 153-157
    DOI: 10.1039/D3MR00006K

    Mechanochemical indium(0)-mediated Barbier allylation of carbonyl compounds: unexpected immiscible water additive effect for hydrophobic reagents

    Nuri Kim, Eun Sul Go and Jeung Gon Kim

    RSC Mechanochem., 2024, 1, 158-161
    DOI: 10.1039/D4MR00005F

    Base-mediated trimerization of enones under solvent-free and ball-milling conditions

    Gang Shao, Pinhua Li, Zheng-Chun Yin, Jun-Shen Chen, Xu-Ling Xia and Guan-Wu Wang

    RSC Mechanochem., 2024, 1, 162-166
    DOI: 10.1039/D3MR00010A

    Unprecedented linear products by a mechanochemically activated Biginelli reaction using lawsone

    Christina L. Koumpoura, Laure Vendier, Christian Bijani, Anne Robert, Philippe Carbonnière, Jean-Marc Sotiropoulos and Michel Baltas

    RSC Mechanochem., 2024, 1, 167-175
    DOI: 10.1039/D3MR00032J

    Iron-free mechanochemical limonene inverse vulcanization

    Rima Tedjini, Raquel Viveiros, Teresa Casimiro and Vasco D. B. Bonifácio

    RSC Mechanochem., 2024, 1, 176-180
    DOI: 10.1039/D3MR00002H

    Diverse metastable diarylacetonitrile radicals generated by polymer mechanochemistry

    Takumi Yamamoto, Daisuke Aoki, Koichiro Mikami and Hideyuki Otsuka

    RSC Mechanochem., 2024,1, 181-188
    DOI: 10.1039/D3MR00031A

    Protecting-group-free mechanosynthesis of amides from hydroxycarboxylic acids: application to the synthesis of imatinib

    Tatsiana Nikonovich, Tatsiana Jarg, Jevgenija Martõnova, Artjom Kudrjašov, Danylo Merzhyievskyi, Marina Kudrjašova, Fabrice Gallou, Riina Aav and Dzmitry Kananovich

    RSC Mechanochem., 2024, 1, 189-195
    DOI: 10.1039/D4MR00006D

    Operando exploration of tribochemical decomposition in synthetic FeS2 thin film and mineral iron pyrite

    E. Muñoz-Cortés, J. Sánchez-Prieto, B. Zabala, C. Sanchez, E. Flores, A. Flores, E. Roman, J. R. Ares and R. Nevshupa

    RSC Mechanochem., 2024,1, 196-210
    DOI: 10.1039/D3MR00027C

     

    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: Tim Hanusa

    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 Hanusa about their study titled Grinding and the anisotropic environment: influences on the diastereoselective formation of Group 15 allyl complexes.

     

    “The environment in a mechanochemically driven reaction is often considered chaotic and random, whether it’s from the pelting of stainless-steel balls or the effect of collisions in resonant acoustic mixing (RAM). So, the possibility of studying a mechanochemical environment that is less than homogenous—that has anisotropic features—is particularly attractive.”

     

    “In this research, we revisited a system we had studied a few years ago, which involved organometallic diastereomers formed either in solution or mechanochemically. In the case of arsenic and antimony complexes with bulky allyl ligands, a greater percentage of the asymmetric form was generated during mechanochemical synthesis. The difference was traced to the use of layered starting reagents, specifically AsI₃ and SbCl₃, and their directing effect on compound formation. In solution, the anisotropic environment is lost, and a larger amount of the more symmetric diastereomer is formed, owing to the quasi-spherical environments around the As³⁺ and Sb³⁺ ions.”

     

    “The current study expanded the range of reagents and mechanochemical variables used to synthesize the diastereomers. The aim was to determine their effect on the diastereomer ratios, yields, and formation of decomposition products. When liquid AsCl₃ was used in place of the layered, solid AsI₃, the diastereomer ratio of the arsenic complex not surprisingly veered toward solution values. However, the strong effect of liquid-assisted grinding (LAG) was unexpected. LAG altered the diastereomer ratio toward solution values, even when minimal amounts of solvents were added, and the reagents had negligible solubility in the added solvent.”

     

    “These results indicate that the anisotropic environment can be meaningfully manipulated in the solid state. Since it is a variable with no direct solution counterpart, such as the time or temperature of the reaction, its expanded use holds promise for new outcomes from mechanochemically initiated synthesis.”

     

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

     

     

    Grinding and the anisotropic environment: influences on the diastereoselective formation of Group 15 allyl complexes

    Lauren E. Wenger and Timothy P. Hanusa

    RSC Mechanochem. 2024, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/D4MR00001C

     

     

      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: Masad Damha, James Thorpe and Julian Marlyn

    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 Masad Damha, James Thorpe and Julian Marlyn about their study titled Synthesis of short DNA and RNA fragments by resonant acoustic mixing (RAM).

     

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

    Synthesis of short DNA and RNA fragments by resonant acoustic mixing (RAM)

    James D. Thorpe, Julian Marlyn, Stefan G. Koenig and Masad J. Damha

    RSC Mechanochem. 2024, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/D4MR00009A

     

     

    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: Michel Baltas, Christina Koumpoura, Christian Bijani and Laure Vendier

    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 Michel Baltas, Christina Koumpoura, Christian Bijani and Laure Vendier about their study titled Unprecedented linear products by a mechanochemically activated Biginelli reaction using lawsone.

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

    Unprecedented linear products by a mechanochemically activated Biginelli reaction using lawsone

    Christina L. Koumpoura, Laure Vendier, Christian Bijani, Anne Robert, Philippe Carbonnière, Jean-Marc Sotiropoulos and Michel Baltas

    RSC Mechanochem. 2024, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/D3MR00032J

     

     

    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: Dzmitry Kananovich, Riina Aav and co-workers

    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 Dzmitry Kananovich, Riina Aav and co-workers about their study titled Protecting-group-free mechanosynthesis of amides from hydroxycarboxylic acids: application to the synthesis of imatinib.

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

    Protecting-group-free mechanosynthesis of amides from hydroxycarboxylic acids: application to the synthesis of imatinib

    Tatsiana Nikonovich, Tatsiana Jarg, Jevgenija Martõnova, Artjom Kudrjašov, Danylo Merzhyievskyi, Marina Kudrjašova, Fabrice Gallou, Riina Aav and Dzmitry Kananovich

    RSC Mechanochem. 2024, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/D4MR00006D

     

     

      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.