The Curious World of Fluorinated Molecules
Molecules Containing Fluorine

Progress in Fluorine Science Series

Coordinator: Seppelt Konrad

Language: English

241.29 €

In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).

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454 p. · 15x22.8 cm · Paperback

The Curious World of Fluorinated Molecules: Molecules Containing Fluorine is the sixth volume in the Progress in Fluorine Science series and is edited by the world-renowned scientist Konrad Seppelt. Dr. Seppelt brings together a team of global experts to uncover the multifaceted nature of the most electronegative element in the Periodic Table. The book explores the fascinating world of unpredictable, fluorine-containing molecules through their discoveries, path to recognition, current state of the art, and impact on the broader fields of fluorinated materials development. This volume will inspire and energize researchers, future scientists, and educators working in fluorine chemistry.

1. Introduction Konrad Seppelt 2. About F2 Florian Kraus 3. When Fluorine Messes up: the Impact of Electron Scavenger on Properties on Molecules and Solids Wojciech Grochala 4. Trifluoromethyl Peroxygen Compounds, A Personal Review and Perspective Darryl DesMarteau V 5. Non-Metal Fluorides,Small in Size but Giant in Properties Erhard Kemnitz 6. Silicon Based Fluoroalkylations Surya G.K. Prakash 7. Perfluorocarbons and Perfluorocarbon Emulsions for Pulmonary Indications Marie Pierre Krafft 8. Curious Effects of Fluorine on Medicinally active Compounds Iwao Ojima 9. Fluorine in the Ecosphere Beate Koksch 10. About Carbon Adducts with P- and B-Fluorides Gerd-Volker Roeschenthaler 11. Surprising Results Herbert Walter Roesky 12. Chemistry and applications of per- and polyfluoroethers Jaroslav Kvicala 13. Metal-Carbon Bonding in Perfluoroethylene and Perfluorobenzene Transition Metal Complexes. Some Underappreciated p- and s-Acceptor Components. Russell Hughes 14. Octadecafluoro[60]fullerene:When Nanocarbon Met Metal Fluoride Olga Boltalina 15. Oxidation Reactions on Benzenes and Ferrocenes Konrad Seppelt

Professor Konrad Seppelt is the former Vice President of the Freie Universitaet Berlin, who leads the research group AG Seppelt at the Institute of Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry, Freie Universität Berlin. In 2000, Konrad Seppelt was the first ever scientist that managed to form a compound between a noble gas and a noble Metal, something that had previously been deemed impossible due to the notoriously inert nature of these chemical groups. In a series of experiments the compound Tetraxenonogold(II) was developed and subsequently published in the journal Science.
  • Highlights the current state of fundamental research of fluorinated molecules that either helped to rewrite the fundamental rules of chemistry or impacted modern material technologies
  • Features contributions from a global team of leading experts in the field
  • Provides a unique combination of the historical and current examples that explain the unique role that fluorine can play in advancing our understanding of the scientific method at large