Archive for November, 2012

2012 – A year to celebrate

Bottle of champagne openingAs 2012 begins to draw to a close, we wanted to take a few moments to reflect back on what has been a very successful year for RSC Advances

…in July, just 11 months after the first issue was published, RSC Advances announced that it would now be publishing weekly issues.  The recent publication of the 2000th RSC Advances article just reinforces what a tremendous start the Journal has had.

…in August, the Journal celebrated it’s first anniversary and marked the event with a celebratory drinks reception at the EuCheMs meeting in Prague.

And not forgetting that this year has also seen the Journal indexed in major databases, offer all submitting authors the chance to publish their manuscript on acceptance and publish its first ‘Gold for Gold’ article

We would like to thank everyone who has contributed to the success of the Journal in the last 12 months, in particular our authors and referees.  We look forward to working with many more of you to continue this success into 2013.

Stay in-touch with all the latest news from the Journal by registering for our free table of contents alerts.

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Highly luminescent yellow emitting material for OLEDs

The crystal structure of [Ir(DMP)3]Organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) are highly promising as energy-efficient lighting and in flat panel displays. Much work is being done around the world and a recently accepted article in RSC Advances, by Yuezhong Meng, Shuanjin Wang and colleagues in China, reports on the preparation of a yellow-emitting iridium complex [Ir(DMP)3] for use in OLEDs.

An OLED doped with 2 wt% of the complex produced yellow emission at 576 nm with a maximum quantum efficiency of 8.7% at 5.93 mA/cm2, and CIE coordinates of (0.49, 0.50). Yellow OLEDs are of key importance for the production of white OLEDs (or WOLEDs) for solid-state lighting applications. Details of the synthesis, characterisation, OLED fabrication and performance are given.

This article is free to access:

Structure and Properties of Highly Luminescent Yellow Emitting Material for OLED and Its Application, Shakil Mulani, Min Xiao, Shuanjin Wang, Yawen Chen, Junbiao Peng and Yuezhong Meng, RSC Adv., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2RA21951D

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By Sara Coles

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The 2000th RSC Advances article has now been published online

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The 2000th article to appear in RSC Advances since the first articles were published in July last year has now been published online.  This is a great achievement for a new journal and illustrates how quickly RSC Advances has become esablished in the field.

The 2000th is by Jinkwon Kim and colleagues from Kongju National University, Republic of Korea, who report facile solution-based synthetic routes to synthesize GeTe nanocrystals.  The group looked at two particular methods to produce these nanomaterials and illustrated how the size and shape of the resulting nanocrystals were strongly dependant on the Tellurium source employed.  Using (Et3Si)2Te as the source gave well-dispersed GeTe nanocrystals of uniform shape, through a ligand exchange mechanism. The authors believe these materials could find applications in phase-change memory devices.

Click here to read the article for free.

Professor Mike Ward, Chair of the RSC Advances Editorial Board, commented ‘We are very proud that RSC Advances has come so far, so fast.  Having started just a year and a half ago with monthly issues, to have moved to publishing weekly issues and reached the milestone of 2,000 articles in such a short time is an impressive achievement.  This illustrates the high demand of researchers around the world for publishing their work in RSC journals, and also shows the way that chemistry is expanding into new and interdisciplinary fields which make existing pigeon-holes and classifications obsolete.  RSC Advances was founded precisely to cater for work that does not obviously fit the remit of longer-established journals and it is gratifying to see it doing so well.  We congratulate Dr. Kim and co-workers on publication of our 2000th paper, and thank them for helping us to reach this important milestone.’

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C-H activation: an article collection

Picture showing several chemical reaction schemes and moleculesOne of the simplest and most utilised chemical reactions is the burning of hydrocarbons and while combustion is an excellent way to exploit the energy content of this naturally occurring resource, there is a lot more we can do with the ‘inert’ C-H bond.

C-H activation allows us to convert cheaper hydrocarbon starting materials into more valuable and versatile products; leading to the development of a wide range of reagents and catalysts that activate C-H bonds. To keep you up to date with the latest developments in the field we have created this article collection, where all articles are free to download until 15th December.

Click here for the full list of free articles

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Identification of (phosphine)gold(I) hydrates and their equilibria in wet solutions

Scientists from China have identified and characterised the elusive gold(I) hydrates that result from the common gold(I) pre-catalyst Ph3PAuOTf.

Gold(I) complexes have been the subject of a great deal of attention in recent year due to their application in a broad range of chemical reactions and their excellent catalytic activity.  Their advantages over some other metal catalysts includes their insensitivity to moisture, therefore not requiring a completely ‘dry’ reaction environment and instead can even be used in reactions with water as the solvent. 

Amongst some of the ambiguous aspects of the catalytic species actually involved in these transformations, the exact role of water, and whether it reacts with the gold complexes, is uncertain.  This is important in order to gauge the impact water has on the catalytic activity and the turnover frequency.  Graphical abstract of C2RA22282EIn this work, Biao Yu and Yu Tang from the Shanghai Institute of Organic Chemistry, China, identified two gold(I) hydrates from the Ph3PAuOTf pre-catalyst – [Ph3PAu(OH2)]+TfOand [(Ph3PAu)2(OH)2]2+(TfO)2, resulting in the disclosure of the equilibria between gold oxo species in wet solutions.  The results presented here help to explain further the stability of some gold complexes in water and the instability of others.

Read the full article for free!

Identification of (phosphine)gold(I) hydrates and their equilibria in wet solutions, Yu Tang and Biao Yu, RSC Adv., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2RA22282E

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DNA glycoclusters and DNA-based carbohydrate microarrays: from design to applications

This review article by Jean-Jacques Vasseur, François Morvan, Yann Chevolot and colleagues from France looks at the design and applications of DNA glycoclusters and DNA-based carbohydrate microarrays, combining the automated chemistry of DNA and “click” chemistry. 

Graphical abstract of C2RA21550KThe authors illustrate that DNA chemistry (phosphoramidite as well as H-phosphonate) can be used to synthesis glycomimetics via a very efficient copper(I) catalyzed azide alkyne cycloaddition (“click” chemistry). This gives quick access to a range of glycomimetics with different topologies, such as linear and crown-like.  Due to the DNA tag present, the glycomimetics can easily be immobilized on microarrays to analyse their interactions and binding-properties with lectins.  The authors demonstrate that DNA glycoarrays relying on DNA directed immobilization presents several advantages over conventional immobilization techniques.

Read the full article for free!

DNA glycoclusters and DNA-based carbohydrate microarrays: From design to applications, François Morvan, Sébastien Vidal, Eliane Souteyrand, Yann Chevolot and Jean-Jacques Vasseur, RSC Adv., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2RA21550K

This article is part of a web-themed issue accross RSC Advances, ChemComm and Organic & Biomolecular ChemistryNucleic acids: new life, new materials‘ dedicated to the memory of Professor Har Gobind Khorana (1922 – 2011), acknowledging his legacy to the nucleic acids community.  Read the collection so far here.

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