
Emily Cuffin-Munday
Articles
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Jan 14, 2025 |
blogs.rsc.org | Emily Cuffin-Munday
Byongwoo Park, Jeong Woo Jeon, Woohyun Kim, Wonho Choi, Gwang Sik Jeon, Sangmin Jeon, Sungjin Kim, Chanyoung Yoo, Junyoung Lim, Yonghun Sung, David Ahn and Cheol Seong Hwang* Dalton Trans., 2025, 54, 492-502 Jaipriya Khatri, Vasanthapandiyan Mari, Aniruddha Sarkar, Naiwrit Karmodak and Basab Bijayi Dhar* Dalton Trans., 2025, 54, 503-510 Prasanna Kumar Ganta, Fei Huang, Taoufik Ben Halima, Rajiv Kamaraj, Yu-Ting Chu, Hsi-Ching Tseng, Shangwu Ding, Kuo-Hui Wu* and Hsuan-Ying Chen* Dalton...
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Dec 10, 2024 |
blogs.rsc.org | Emily Cuffin-Munday
Photoluminescence and magnetic properties of isostructural europium(iii), gadolinium(iii) and terbium(iii) oxamate-based coordination polymersCleverton O. C. da Silveira, Willian X. C. Oliveira, Eufrânio N. da Silva Júnior, Meiry E. Alvarenga, Felipe T. Martins, Claudia C. Gatto, Carlos B. Pinheiro, Emerson F. Pedroso, Júlia P. O. Silva, Lippy F. Marques, Moliria V. Santos, Francisco R. Torres, Rividy Euclides, Ricardo O. Freire, Wallace C. Nunes, Adriele A. de Almeida, Marcelo Knobel and Cynthia L. M.
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Oct 4, 2024 |
chemistryworld.com | Emily Cuffin-Munday
Over a quarter of hypothetical tricyclic benzene isomers that earlier computational studies had classed as stable are completely unsynthesisable due to quantum tunnelling.1 That’s according to quantum chemistry calculations by Sindy Julieth Rodríguez and Sebastian Kozuch from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel.
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Jun 21, 2024 |
blogs.rsc.org | Emily Cuffin-Munday
We are delighted to announce the winner of our 2023 Outstanding Paper Award. The Outstanding Paper Award is aimed at recognising the great work published in Dalton Transactions from the previous year. The process for selecting the winner involves the shortlisting of papers published in the journal within the previous year based on nominations by members of the Editorial Board as well as a variety of metrics including article downloads, Altmetric score and citations.
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Mar 13, 2024 |
chemistryworld.com | Emily Cuffin-Munday
Failing to consider how solvent polarity affects the thermodynamic properties of photocatalysts is stopping scientists from accurately optimising their reactions, new research shows. ‘It would seem that up until now the concept of the effect of solvent had never been looked at,’ notes Eli Zysman-Colman from the University of St Andrews, UK, who led the work. Zysman-Colman’s team’s study also suggests that some photocatalysts are misclassified in the literature.
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