Author Archive

South African chemist joins NJC Editorial Board

The Editors-in-Chief of NJC welcome 3 new members to the boards. Earlier this year Len Barbour of Stellenbosch University in South Africa and Takashi Kato of the University of Tokyo were appointed to the Editorial Board, while Davit Zargarian, at the University of Montreal in Québec, Canada, has joined the International Advisory Board. Len and Takashi will be participating in the 2012 NJC Symposia: New Directions in Chemistry, which will be held in Hong Kong, Shanghai and Beijing during the last week of April.

In this post I present Len Barbour, professor of chemistry at Stellenbosch University in South Africa.

Len completed his Ph.D. research in 1994 at the University of Cape Town, where he studied physico-chemical aspects of inclusion compounds under the direction of Professor Luigi Nassimbeni. He then moved to the University of Missouri-Columbia (UMC) to work as a postdoctoral fellow with Professor Jerry Atwood. Len continued at UMC as a Research Assistant Professor until 2003, at which time he moved back to South Africa to take up an Associate Professor position at Stellenbosch University. Len was promoted to Full Professor in 2005 and two years later was awarded a South African Research Chairs Initiative (SARChI) Chair in Nanostructured Functional Materials, a position that was recently renewed.

Len’s research interests centre on structure-property relationships in molecular crystals. Properties of interest include porosity, nonlinear optics, and anomalous thermal expansion, with the main objective being to gain new insights into physical processes that occur at the molecular scale. Using a crystal engineering approach, the group carries out multifaceted studies that include the synthesis of molecular building blocks, crystallisation studies, kinetic and thermodynamic measurements, X-ray structure elucidation, computation and process engineering.  Methodology development is also a strong research theme within the group.

Of his nomination to the NJC Board, Len had this to say: “I was greatly honoured when asked to join the editorial board of the New Journal of Chemistry—an invitation that I accepted without hesitation. NJC has a longstanding record of publishing outstanding papers that cover a broad range of subdisciplines within chemistry, and I very much look forward to making meaningful contributions aimed at maintaining and even improving the journal’s profile.

We look forward to welcoming Len Barbour onto the Editorial Board of NJC at the upcoming Board meeting.

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Professor Takashi Kato appointed to NJC Editorial Board

The Editors-in-Chief of NJC welcome 3 new members to the boards. Earlier this year Len Barbour of Stellenbosch University in South Africa and Takashi Kato of the University of Tokyo were appointed to the Editorial Board, while Davit Zargarian, at the University of Montreal in Québec, Canada, has joined the International Advisory Board. Len and Takashi will be participating in the 2012 NJC Symposia: New Directions in Chemistry, which will be held in Hong Kong, Shanghai and Beijing during the last week of April.

In this post, I present Takashi Kato, who is a professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biotechnology of the School of Engineering at The University of Tokyo since 2000. His research focuses on the development of self-assembled functional materials including liquid crystals, gels, polymers, stimuli-responsive materials, nanostructured ion- and electron-active materials, and bio-inspired hybrids.

Takashi received his Ph.D. degree at the University of Tokyo in 1988. After his postdoctoral research at Cornell University with Professor Jean M. J. Frechet on supramolecular liquid crystals and polymers (1988-1989), he joined The University of Tokyo. Takashi is the recipient of numerous awards from a variety of organizations around the world: the Chemical Society of Japan Award for Young Chemists (1993), the Wiley Polymer Science Award (Chemistry, 2001), the 17th IBM Japan Science Award (Chemistry, 2003), the 1st JSPS Prize (2005), the Japanese Liquid Crystal Society (2008), Molecular Science Forum Lecture Professorship of the Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Science (2009), and the Society of Polymer Science, Japan (2010).

Takashi has published about 350 papers including original papers, reviews, and chapters of books. He is an Associate Editor of Polymer Journal (2002-present) and is also on several advisory boards, including those of two RSC journals—Journal of Materials Chemistry and Chemical Science.

“It is my great pleasure to join the Editorial Board of New Journal of Chemistry. Interdisciplinary fields relating to and surrounding chemistry and interdisciplinary fields in chemistry are becoming more important both to advance science and to resolve global issues. I believe New Journal of Chemistry is an excellent forum for this mission.”

With his vast experience in chemistry and in working with RSC Publishing, we are looking forward to having Takashi Kato’s input into NJC‘s editorial policy and his help for the promotion of the journal.

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Register for the China NJC Symposia

Are you interested in attending one of the 2012 NJC Symposia: New Directions in Chemistry?

(Full details can be found here and here.)

Then please register—it’s free, easy and only takes a minute!

Send an e-mail with the following information to njc ‘at’ univ-montp2.fr (replace ‘at’ with @)

  • your full name
  • your status (Ph.D. student, postdoc, researcher, professor)
  • your institution
  • which symposium you wish to attend: Hong Kong on April 23rd, Shanghai on April 25th or Beijing on April 27th

You can also click here to access a link to send an e-mail automatically to the editor.

Please register by April 15th!

Thank you for your interest and we look forward to meeting you soon…

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

NJC Symposia in China

The countdown has begun! In just one month 9 NJC Board members and 2 editors will be on their way to China to participate in the 3 days of the 2012 NJC Symposium: New Directions in Chemistry, which are being organised with the collaboration of the University of Hong Kong, East China University of Science and Technology, and the Chinese Academy of Sciences Institute of Chemistry in Beijing.

Schedule
April 23rd: University of Hong Kong, Meng Wah Complex, Lecture Theatre T6, from 8:45 am to 7 pm
April 25th: East China University of Science and Technology, Yifu Building, Conference Room I, from 10 am to 7 pm
April 27th: Institute of Chemistry of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Building 3, Room 101, from 10 am to 6 pm

We hope to meet many of you there!

If you wish to attend, please send me an email (click here for details).

Of special interest for younger chemists in Shanghai and Beijing: I will be giving a one-hour course on manuscript preparation and publication, starting at 9 am, just before the symposia.

Many thanks to the host institutions, the CNRS, RSC Publishing, the French Consulate in Hong Kong and Macau, and the French Embassy in China for their support, which has made these events possible!

Full details are on the flyers and programs below (click on an image to see a larger image).

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Meet Our Authors — March 2012

This month let’s get acquainted with 4 of the authors whose work is included in the March 2012 issue of NJC. We’ll find out what they have to say about their research and also a little about their taste in music.

WZ WangOur first author is Professor Wen-Zhen Wang, who  hails from the Chemistry and Chemical Engineering College of Xi’an Shiyou University in Xi’an, P. R. China. Xi’an is in Shaanxi Province in the center of China and is one of China’s oldest cities. It was the eastern terminus of the Silk Road and is also home to the famed Terracotta Army.

Wen-Zhen’s research covers the broad areas of coordination chemistry and catalysts. With colleagues from the Republic of China and the Azerbaijan Republic, Wen-Zhen has synthesized a series of pentachromium(II) metal string complexes and studied their structures, magnetic properties and single-molecular electronic conductivity. X-Ray crystallographic studies reported in this NJC article revealed that the structure of the complexes is non-symmetric: the linear metal chain structure consists of two quadruple Cr–Cr bonds and a separated high spin Cr(II) at the end, in a quintet ground state with four unpaired electrons. The complexes are quite resistant to oxidation and one complex exhibited good electronic conductance.

Celine Dion, the popular French-Canadian singer, is Wen-Zhen’s favorite musician. “I like her voice” simply states our chemist, who also loves classical music.

Fine tuning of pentachromium(II) metal string complexes through elaborate design of ligand by Wen-Zhen Wang, Rayyat Huseyn Ismayilov, Gene-Hsiang Lee, Yi-Lin Huang, Chen-Yu Yeh, Ming-Dung Fu, Chun-hsien Chen and Shie-Ming Peng, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 632-637. DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20512A

A BricenoDr. Alexander Briceño is an Associate Researcher at the Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas (IVIC) in Caracas, Venezuela. His research interests include crystal engineering of photoreactive supramolecular assemblies directed by metal-coordination, hydrogen bonds and ionic interactions; the synthesis and structural characterisation of novel nano/microcomposites based on integrative chemistry of different kinds of materials; hydrogels, carbonaceous materials, MOFs, metal oxides and metal nanoparticles with multiple properties as adsorbents or catalysts.

In their NJC paper, Alexander and his colleagues establish a non-photochemical route to prepare quantitatively, regio- and stereoselectively rtct-pyridyl cyclobutane derivatives using a combination of  a solid state [2+2] photoreaction and a controlled isomerisation via a hydrothermal-assisted process. This alternative approach can be very helpful in overcoming the limitations imposed by Schmidt’s topochemical postulate  for obtaining regioselective photoproducts with such stereochemical requirements from crystalline assemblies. This method opens a window to develop efficient routes for the preparation of new and conventional cyclobutane-like stereoisomers that are difficult or impossible to access either in solution or by known solid state routes (such as the rcct-configuration). It also includes the possibility of inducing chirality on achiral cyclobutanes.

These rtct cyclobutane derivatives represent novel, attractive, multitopic building blocks for crystal engineering of metal-organic polyhedra, metal-organic frameworks and supramolecular hydrogen-bonded assemblies and are particularly useful for the study of supramolecular isomerism in the solid state.

Alexander’s favorite musician is the Venezuelan José Antonio Abreu, who founded the National System of Youth and Children’s Orchestras and Choirs of Venezuela: “His perseverance and dedication to the development of a classical music education program that uses music as a fascinating tool for the social integration, transformation and personal growth of thousands of youth and children in Venezuela has had influence beyond our frontiers.”

Combining topochemical [2+2] photoreactions and hydrothermal isomerisation for the regioselective and quantitative preparation of rtct-pyridylcyclobutanes by Yennifer Hill, Maholy Linares and Alexander Briceño, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 554-557. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ20855E
 

C Caris-VeyratDr Catherine Caris-Veyrat holds a Research Scientist position at the French INRA (National Institute for Agronomical Research). Her laboratory, located in Avignon in southern France, is looking into the safety and quality of plant products.

Catherine is interested in micronutrients, mainly carotenoids and their metabolites/oxidation compounds. Speaking of her NJC paper, she says “Our work is mainly in the field of chemistry (synthesis and physico-chemistry) but with an impact in the area of nutrition and health. It could bring insights into the in vivo activity mechanisms of lycopene, a natural bioactive molecule (found in tomatoes), and its possible metabolites.”  Since beta-carotene is the main precursor of vitamin A (retinol), researchers think that metabolites of non-provitamin A carotenoids could also be bioactive. “Consumption of tomato or derived tomato products has been shown to be good for health, possibly preventing appearance of degenerative diseases (cancers, cardio-vascular diseases, etc.). The main pigment in tomatoes (the carotenoid lycopene) or its metabolites could be implied in the protective effects. Our work was integrated into a European project on the effect of lycopene on cardio-vascular diseases.”

As a classical music lover, Catherine particularly likes Cecilia Bartoli, an Italian lyric female singer, especially for her interpretation of baroque music, such as that by Handel for example. “Her timbre of voice is very wide and warm and her interpretation of music pieces very expressive” is Catherine’s summary of her favorite musician.

Antioxidant activity of (all-E)-lycopene and synthetic apo-lycopenoids in a chemical model of oxidative stress in the gastro-intestinal tract by Pascale Goupy, Eric Reynaud, Olivier Dangles and Catherine Caris-Veyrat, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 575-587. DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20437H

 

S SpangeOur last chemist for this month is Stefan Spange, who is full Professor in the Institute of Chemistry at the University of Technology Chemnitz, Germany. Stefan’s research covers a broad range of subjects: solvatochromism, ionic liquids, hybrid materials, surface functionalization and twin polymerization.

His NJC publication reports on four merocyanine-type dyes derived from barbituric and thiobarbituric acid that can be used as probe molecules for the determination of empirical polarity parameters of oxidic, photocatalytic, and even coloured surfaces such as metals. “The appropriate polarity data of these types of surfaces is very important to explain many phenomena such as catalytic activity or polymer-surface interactions and therefore we think that this article is of great importance for a broad audience of chemists.”

While Stefan, like the other featured authors, likes classical music, his favourite kind of music is heavy metal, especially doom- and black metal. “At the moment I listen to Agalloch, My Dying Bride and Helheim from Norway. Also I like to listen to Nocte Obducta and Agrypnie from Germany.” When he was younger, he enjoyed Genesis (with Peter Gabriel), Pink Floyd, Deep Purple, Jimi Hendrix, Black Sabbath and Led Zeppelin.

Probing the surface polarity of inorganic oxides using merocyanine-type dyes derived from barbituric acid by Susan Seifert, Andreas Seifert, Gunther Brunklaus, Katja Hofmann, Tobias Rüffer, Heinrich Lang and Stefan Spange, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 674-684. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ20835K

I hoped you enjoyed reading about this selection of chemists. We thank them most warmly for accepting our invitation and having kindly taken their time to answer a few questions for us.

Check back next month for more profiles of NJC authors!


Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Announcing the 2012 NJC Symposia in China

Three prestigious institutions will be hosting members of the NJC editorial board and two NJC editors for the 2012 NJC Symposium: New Directions in Chemistry, which will be held during the last week of April 2012. Each one-day symposium will feature presentations by the editorial board members, prominent local chemists and the editors.

These symposia are free and open to all interested persons.

Please send an email with your full name, affiliation, status and which symposium you wish to attend by April 15th. This will allow us to welcome you under the best conditions.

Please join us and meet:

Members of the NJC Editorial Board who will be participating in the 2012 NJC Symposia include:
Co-Editor-in-Chief Professor Mir Wais HOSSEINI (University of Strasbourg, France)
Associate Editor Professor Michael SCOTT (University of Florida, USA)
Associate Editor Professor Peter JUNK (Monash University, Australia)
Professor Len BARBOUR (University of Stellenbosch, South Africa)
Professor Debbie CRANS (Colorado State University, USA)
Professor Odile EISENSTEIN (CNRS, Montpellier, France)
Professor Helen HAILES (University College London, UK)
Professor Takashi KATO (University of Tokyo, Japan)
Professor J N MOORTHY (Indian Institute of Technology, India)

NJC Managing Editor Dr Denise PARENT (Montpellier, France) and NJC Assistant Editor Dr Ling PENG (Marseille, France) will also be present.


April 23 at the University of Hong Kong (Host: Professor Vivian YAM)
Guest Speakers: Professors CHE Chi-ming and YANG Dan (University of Hong Kong); Professors JIA Guochen and TANG Ben Zhong (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology)

April 25 at East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai (Host: Professor QIAN Xuhong)
Guest Speakers: Professor MA Dawei (Shanghai Institute of Organic Chemistry); Professor JIN Guoxin (Fudan University); Professor YANG Yi (ECUST)

April 27 at the Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing (Host: Professor YAO Jiannian)
Guest Speakers: Professor LIU Zhongfan (Peking University); Professors HAN Buxing and ZHANG Deqing (Institute of Chemistry, CAS Beijing)


Full details and the scientific programs will be available soon. Please check this blog in the coming weeks.

We all look forward to meeting you in Hong Kong, Shanghai or Beijing in April!

http://www.ucl.ac.uk/chemistry/staff/academic_pages/helen_hailes
Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Read NJC’s Themed Issue on Dendrimers

If you work with dendrimers, or are interested in learning more about these fascinating molecules, then don’t miss NJC‘s themed issue on dendrimers that has recently been published on-line (February 2012 issue).

Guest-edited by renowned expert Jean-Pierre Majoral, this Dendrimers II issue follows our highly successful first Dendrimers issue of July 2007. In his editorial prefacing this latest issue, Jean-Pierre defines the concept of “dendrimer space” (click to read it free)

The three short and topical Focus reviews look at dendrimers as bactericides, in biomedical applications and in neurodegenerative diseases. The ten longer Perspective reviews cover the synthesis and properties of dendrimers, materials that incorporate dendrimers, and a variety of applications of dendrimers in biology and medicine.

Eighteen original research works complete the issue. I’ve selected five of these contributions, highly ranked by the reviewers, as Hot Papers; these will be free to access during the month of February (just click on the DOIs below).

• 5 Hot Papers

The biodistribution of maltotriose modified PPI dendrimers, with particular attention to the BBB crossing, was studied in a collaboration of Polish and German groups, revealing that the dendrimers were able to enter rat’s important organs, including the brain.

“The biodistribution of maltotriose modified poly(propylene imine) (PPI) dendrimers conjugated with fluorescein—proofs of crossing blood–brain–barrier” by A. Janaszewska, B. Ziemba, K. Ciepluch, D. Appelhans, B. Voit, B. Klajnert and M. Bryszewska, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 350-353. DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20444K

The group of Rainer Haag (Freie Universität Berlin) looked at fluorous polyglycerol dendrons and dendrimers, which are used to form highly stable aggregates in the micro- to nanometer range in water.

Supramolecular behavior of fluorous polyglycerol dendrons and polyglycerol dendrimers with perfluorinated shells in water” by M. Zieringer, M. Wyszogrodzka, K. Biskup and R. Haag, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 402-406. DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20741E

Steven Zimmerman (University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign), in collaboration with Rainer Haag, used hyperbranched polyglycerols to solubilize perylenediimide (PDI) and improve its fluorescent properties.

“Synthesis and properties of fluorescent dyes conjugated to hyperbranched polyglycerols” by A. T. Zill, K. Licha, R. Haag and S. C. Zimmerman, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 419-427. DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20476A

In the contribution by Bertrand Donnio and colleagues at the IPCMS in Strasbourg, two libraries of segmented block co-dendritic supermolecules bearing semi-fluorinated chains and lipophilic poly(benzyl ether)-based wedges form unusual liquid crystalline mesophases, whose supramolecular organization is tuned by the dendritic connectivity of both compartments.

“Self-assembly and liquid-crystalline supramolecular organizations of semifluorinated block co-dendritic supermolecules” by I. Bury, B. Heinrich, C. Bourgogne, G. H. Mehl, D. Guillon and B. Donnio, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 452-468. DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20530G

A self-assembly strategy allowing the generation of homo- and hetero-nuclear metallodendritic materials is the result of a joint effort by several American groups at the University of Akron and Louisiana State University.

“Shape-persistent, ruthenium(II)- and iron(II)-bisterpyridine metallodendrimers: synthesis, traveling-wave ion-mobility mass spectrometry, and photophysical properties” by J.-L. Wang, X. Li, C. D. Shreiner, X. Lu, C. N. Moorefield, S. R. Tummalapalli, D. A. Medvetz, M. J. Panzner, F. R. Fronczek, C. Wesdemiotis and G. R. Newkome, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 484-491. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ20799K

Take a look at these hot papers while they are free to all, this month only!

• About the Covers

The paper by J.-L. Wang et al. is also the subject of the outside cover (shown at the top) featuring windmills and dendrimers, while the inside front cover (at right) illustrates the Perspective review by French researchers in Strasbourg and Lyon on dendrimers in medical imaging .

“Dendrimers in nuclear medical imaging” by C. Ghobril, G. Lamanna, M. Kueny-Stotz, A. Garofalo, C. Billotey and D. Felder-Flesch, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 310-323. DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20416E (available to subscribers only)

We invite you to browse the issue here, and if you are a subscriber, to read more about dendrimers from the world’s experts in the field. Enjoy!

Click to subscribe to NJC.

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Presentation of NJC issue to Didier Astruc

At the beginning of December I made the trip to Bordeaux to participate in a 2-day symposium that brought together many of the authors who contributed to the NJC issue in honor of Didier Astruc.

Former co-workers, current colleagues, friends from around the world were there, including Prof. Hiroshi Nishihara (who incidentally provided the artwork for the inside front cover to accompany his article in the October issue) and Dr. Yves Chauvin, who spoke at the presentation of this NJC issue to Didier.

From left to right: Yves Chauvin, Denise Parent, Didier Astruc, Jean-René Hamon

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Symposium in honour of Prof. Didier Astruc

Many of the authors who contributed to the October 2011 NJC issue in honour of Didier Astruc will gather in Bordeaux next month to recognise Didier’s outstanding contributions to chemistry.

The International Symposium on Coordination Chemistry and Molecular Materials, will be hosted by the University of Bordeaux 1 on December 1st and 2nd.

In addition to the scientific lectures covering a wide range of topics, Henri Kagan and Jean-Pierre Sauvage will present “Grand Public” lectures and a “Grand Public” discussion will be held with Yves Chauvin (2005 Nobel Laureate).

Yves Chauvin will also present Didier Astruc with a copy of the NJC issue in his honour, in the presence of the guest editors (Jean-René Hamon, Jean-Yves Saillard, Jaime Ruiz Aranzaes) and NJC editor Denise Parent.

All details and the full program are on the conference website.

Attendance is free, but you need to register by Friday, November 18th!

We hope to see you there!

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

NJC Editor-in-Chief honoured by CNRS

Congratulations to NJC co-Editor-in-Chief Wais Hosseini, who is one of the two CNRS Chemistry Institute laureates of the 2011 Silver Medal! This distinction is given to mid-career researchers who are recognised on the national and international level for the originality, quality and importance of their work.

Wais is a pioneer in the use of supramolecular chemistry concepts to elaborate molecular materials whose properties are gouverned by the nature of the building blocks and their mode of self-assembly. His work has shown that particularly interesting topologies, such as tubular and helical architectures, two-dimensional braids, and crystals of crystals, can be obtained using finely designed building blocks or tectons. In addition to his contribution to molecular tectonics, he has worked on the selective capture of alkali metal cations and molecular turnstiles.

Here is a selection of Wais’s recent papers in NJC and other RSC journals:

Amidinium based ionic liquids by Pierre Dechambenoit, Sylvie Ferlay, Nathalie Kyritsakas and Mir Wais Hosseini, New J. Chem., 2010, 34, 1184-1199. DOI: 10.1039/B9NJ00625G

Molecular tectonics: ribbon type coordination networks based on porphyrins bearing two pyridine or two pyridine N-oxide units by Emmanuel Deiters, Véronique Bulach and Mir Wais Hosseini, New J. Chem., 2008, 32, 99-104. DOI: 10.1039/B708352A

Molecular tectonics: generation of 1-D interdigitated and 2-D interwoven helical silver coordination networks by oligoethylene glycol based tectons bearing two benzonitrile moieties by Julien Bourlier, Mir Wais Hosseini, Jean-Marc Planeix and Nathalie Kyritsakas, New J. Chem., 2007, 31, 25-32. DOI: 10.1039/B611415F

Molecular tectonics: design of enantiomerically pure helical tubular crystals with controlled channel size and orientation by Mei-Jin Lin, Abdelaziz Jouaiti, Philippe Grosshans, Nathalie Kyritsakas and Mir Wais Hosseini, Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 7635-7637. DOI: 10.1039/C1CC12110C

Molecular tectonics: control of interpenetration in cuboid 3-D coordination networks by Mei-Jin Lin, Abdelaziz Jouaiti, Nathalie Kyritsakas and Mir Wais Hosseini, CrystEngComm, 2011, 13, 776-778. DOI: 10.1039/C0CE00777C

An oscillating molecular turnstile by Thomas Lang, Ernest Graf, Nathalie Kyritsakas and Mir Wais Hosseini, Dalton Trans., 2011, 40, 5244-5248. DOI: 10.1039/C1DT10184F

And for a more general look at the field:
Self-assembly and generation of complexity by Mir Wais Hosseini, Chem. Commun., 2005, 5825-5829. DOI: 10.1039/B513586A

More details about the work in Wais’s lab can be found on their website.

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)