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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Mark Stradiotto (Department of Chemistry, Dalhousie University, Canada) , Rylan J. Lundgren (Department of Chemistry, Dalhousie University, Canada) , Stephen L. Buchwald , David MilsteinPublisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc Imprint: John Wiley & Sons Inc Dimensions: Width: 17.30cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 24.60cm Weight: 0.816kg ISBN: 9781118839836ISBN 10: 1118839838 Pages: 448 Publication Date: 21 October 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsCatalysis underpins both modern industrial and academic chemistry, improving reaction sustainability, shaping reaction selectivity and facilitating fundamentally new reaction pathways. While the focus is often on the showpiece metals themselves, the ligands are the true shapers of this reactivity. Stradiotto and Lundgren have curated a collection that certainly celebrates ligands across a wide array of applications. At over 400 pages across 13 chapters written by world leaders in catalysis and ligand design, the book is a modern resource for those working in the area. The book opens with a chapter detailing the underlying key concepts that feature throughout the rest of the book. This is likely the only chapter which would serve the undergraduate student but as a stand-alone chapter would indeed provide a strong additional resource for final year students on a catalysis and/or coordination chemistry course. From there, each chapter captures a specific vignette of relevance to the authors. The overall book is by no means comprehensive in coverage, but it neither intends to be or indeed should be. Instead, it permits the reader to learn about specific topics in the key authors voice, and from a unified perspective of the ligand design... The book, as a secondary impact, also helps to showcase the important contribution Canadian researchers have made to catalysis and ligand design, with 6 of the 13 chapters written by authors at Canadian universities. In closing, the collection of articles found in Ligand Design in Metal Chemistry is certainly worthy of a book shelf spot for those working in the field of ligand design in catalysis. As the content of the book is necessarily focussed, this reviewer recommends a thorough read through the table of contents to ensure that chapters of particular interest are complemented by those that will introduce the reader to new areas. (AOC, Feb 2017) Catalysis underpins both modern industrial and academic chemistry, improving reaction sustainability, shaping reaction selectivity and facilitating fundamentally new reaction pathways. While the focus is often on the showpiece metals themselves, the ligands are the true shapers of this reactivity. Stradiotto and Lundgren have curated a collection that certainly celebrates ligands across a wide array of applications. At over 400 pages across 13 chapters written by world leaders in catalysis and ligand design, the book is a modern resource for those working in the area. The book opens with a chapter detailing the underlying key concepts that feature throughout the rest of the book. This is likely the only chapter which would serve the undergraduate student but as a stand-alone chapter would indeed provide a strong additional resource for final year students on a catalysis and/or coordination chemistry course. From there, each chapter captures a specific vignette of relevance to the authors. The overall book is by no means comprehensive in coverage, but it neither intends to be or indeed should be. Instead, it permits the reader to learn about specific topics in the key authors voice, and from a unified perspective of the ligand design... The book, as a secondary impact, also helps to showcase the important contribution Canadian researchers have made to catalysis and ligand design, with 6 of the 13 chapters written by authors at Canadian universities. In closing, the collection of articles found in Ligand Design in Metal Chemistry is certainly worthy of a book shelf spot for those working in the field of ligand design in catalysis. As the content of the book is necessarily focussed, this reviewer recommends a thorough read through the table of contents to ensure that chapters of particular interest are complemented by those that will introduce the reader to new areas. (AOC, Feb 2017) Author InformationMark Stradiotto, Department of Chemistry, Dalhousie University, Canada Rylan Lundgren, Department of Chemistry, University of Alberta, Canada Both professors have a well-established track-record of working in the field of organometallic ligand design and catalysis, and have published extensively on the subjects of metal-catalyzed cross-coupling, novel transition-metal bond activation, and asymmetric catalysis. They are co-inventors of the now commercialized DalPhos ligand family and have broad experience of the field of ligand design. Professor Stradiotto has worked in the field of organometallic chemistry for the past fourteen years. Professor Lundgren earned his PhD under the supervision of Prof Stradiotto at Dalhousie University in 2010. Following a PDF at MIT and Caltech with Prof. Greg Fu, Rylan accepted a faculty position at the University of Alberta (Canada). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |