When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Lanthanide compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanthanide_compounds

    Lanthanide metals react exothermically with hydrogen to form LnH 2, dihydrides. [1] With the exception of Eu and Yb, which resemble the Ba and Ca hydrides (non-conducting, transparent salt-like compounds),they form black pyrophoric, conducting compounds [6] where the metal sub-lattice is face centred cubic and the H atoms occupy tetrahedral sites. [1]

  3. Lanthanide probes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanthanide_probes

    EuFOD, an example of a europium complex. It has been known since the early 1930s that the salts of certain lanthanides are fluorescent. [4] The reaction of lanthanide salts with nucleic acids was discussed in a number of publications during the 1930s and the 1940s where lanthanum-containing reagents were employed for the fixation of nucleic acid structures. [3]

  4. Lanthanide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanthanide

    Despite this, the use of lanthanide coordination complexes as homogeneous catalysts is largely restricted to the laboratory and there are currently few examples them being used on an industrial scale. [36] Lanthanides exist in many forms other than coordination complexes and many of these are industrially useful.

  5. Suzuki reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzuki_reaction

    The Suzuki reaction or Suzuki coupling is an organic reaction that uses a palladium complex catalyst to cross-couple a boronic acid to an organohalide. [1] [2] [3] It was first published in 1979 by Akira Suzuki, and he shared the 2010 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Richard F. Heck and Ei-ichi Negishi for their contribution to the discovery and development of noble metal catalysis in organic ...

  6. Rare-earth element - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rare-earth_element

    The rare-earth elements (REE), also called the rare-earth metals or rare earths, and sometimes the lanthanides or lanthanoids (although scandium and yttrium, which do not belong to this series, are usually included as rare earths), [1] are a set of 17 nearly indistinguishable lustrous silvery-white soft heavy metals.

  7. Lanthanide chlorides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanthanide_chlorides

    Lanthanide chlorides are a group of chemical compounds that can form between a lanthanide element (from lanthanum to lutetium) and chlorine. The lanthanides in these compounds are usually in the +2 and +3 oxidation states , although compounds with lanthanides in lower oxidation states exist.

  8. CyTOF - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CyTOF

    Targets are selected to answer a specific research question and are labeled with lanthanide metal tagged antibodies. Labeled cells are nebulized and mixed with heated argon gas to dry the cell containing particles. The sample-gas mixture is focused and ignited with an argon plasma torch. This breaks the cells into their individual atoms and ...

  9. Chiral derivatizing agent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiral_derivatizing_agent

    (R)-α-methoxy-α-(trifluoromethyl)- phenylacetic acid (Mosher's acid). In analytical chemistry, a chiral derivatizing agent (CDA), also known as a chiral resolving reagent, is a derivatization reagent that is a chiral auxiliary used to convert a mixture of enantiomers into diastereomers in order to analyze the quantities of each enantiomer present and determine the optical purity of a sample.