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Primary Journals

Original work is reported in the primary journals, which continue to proliferate. Many papers appear in the national chemical society journals of the United Kingdom, the United States, Germany, the U.S.S.R., and Japan, in which countries much organometallic chemistry originates. Organometallic chemistry also has its own journal, which started in 1963, and recently others concerned with the use of organometallics in synthesis have appeared (see Section F). [Pg.285]

Particularly important are the various journals which publish short communications. These resulted from a need for a more rapid means of communication between scientists, as the time taken for longer and more detailed papers to be published generally became over six months. The most useful of these is Chemical Communications (originally part of the Proceedings [Pg.285]

Although the number of chemical journals is now legion, a breakdown of the references quoted in the Annual Surveys of Organometallic Chemistry over the past six years shows that the majority of original work appears in relatively few journals, as is shown in Table II. As can be seen, a different [Pg.286]

Breakdown (by Journal) of References Quoted in Organometallic Chemistry Revirews, Section B (Organo-Transition Metal Chemistry) [Pg.286]

Most of the organometallic articles in Russian primary journals appear in English translation, published by either the Chemical Society, London, [Pg.287]

The Journal of the Chemical Society now appears in six parts, as a result of the amalgamation of The Chemical Society and the Faraday Society (together with the Royal Institute of Chemistry). These are  [Pg.386]

Chemical Communications (/. Chem. Soc. Chem. Commun.), the section for urgent publication. [Pg.386]

Dalton Transactions (J. Chem. Soc., Dalton Trans.), structure and reactions of inorganic and most organometallic compounds, partially succeeding J. Chem. Soc. (A). [Pg.386]

Perkin Transactions, I and II (J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. I and II), are now the organic and physical organic chemistry sections, respectively, replacing J. Chem. Soc. (C) and (B), respectively. [Pg.386]


These days, even the simplest problems discussed in the primary journals are jnuch more sophisticated, and I will give you a flavour as we progress through the text. [Pg.3]

Density functional theory was originally developed by solid-state physicists for treating crystalline solids and almost all applications were in that field until the mid-1980s. It is a current hot topic in chemistry, with many papers appearing in the primary journals. [Pg.229]

Editorial, A Double-Edged Sword , 2008.1 should also note that Nature, which is the primary journal of the Nature Publishing Group, responded to our meta-analysis with an excellent editorial on 6 March 2008. Citing the difficulties we had in obtaining access to complete data, they advocated a mandatory database that would provide access to the results of all trials clinical trials that are undertaken, not just those that are published. [Pg.185]

Literature to the end of 1991 is covered in this review (primary journals). [Pg.188]

The research community of chemical engineering has a responsibility to address and to solve problems that bolster the health of the chemical and petroleum industries, as well as that of many emerging high-tech and environmental industries. Advances in Chemical Engineering has a responsibility to publish articles that would shorten the gap between research results found in primary journals on the one hand, and the stimulation of new research, the teaching of graduate courses, and the practice of engineering on the other hand. [Pg.282]

A scientifically evaluated and fully referenced data bank, developed and maintained by the National Cancer Institute (NCI). It contains some 8,000 chemical records with carcinogenicity, mutagenicity, tumor promotion, and tumor inhibition test results. Data are derived from studies cited in primary journals, current awareness tools, NCI reports, and other special sources. Test results have been reviewed by experts in carcinogenesis and mutagenesis. [Pg.304]

This review covers the literature in primary journals to early 1981 and in Chemical Abstract Subject Indexes to Volume 94. The names used are those adopted by Chemical Abstracts, and the numbering system is [1,2,3) etc. for triazoles rather than the v- or s- symbols. [Pg.80]

Two texts are good sources of background information one is edited by A. W. Czanderna (2) and the other by P. E. Kane and G. B. Larabee (3). If the reader has a deeper interest in the subject, the primary journals in the field are Surface Science and the Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology. Adequate descriptions of the equipment are available in the introductory reviews. [Pg.390]

The first volume of Advances in Organometallic Chemistry was published early in 1964, and twelve other volumes have appeared since that date. The Editors have sought to produce a series of books containing specialist articles on all aspects of this field. The success of the series, as judged by the reviews of the books published in the journal literature, is due in large measure to the cooperation and help we have received from some one hundred and ten contributors. However, the demand for authoritative surveys of topics in organometallic chemistry derives mainly from the continued resilience of this area of endeavor, one measure of which is the annual appearance of over 2000 primary journal articles. [Pg.429]

This review covers the literature reported in Chemical Abstracts up to Volume 87 and in the common primary journals published until the end of 1977. [Pg.114]

Other sources, apart from the primary journals, include the German Brauer, now fortunately translated into English (F4), and many of the surveys of synthetic methods appearing in Preparative Inorganic Reactions (F5) have illustrative examples appended. Laboratory techniques peculiar to organometallic chemistry have also been described in books (e.g., F6-7), and in the series Techniques of Inorganic Chemistry (F8). [Pg.293]

Referring to current awareness journals or computer databases these are useful for keeping you up to date with current research they usually provide a monthly listing of article details (title, authors, source, author address) arranged by subject and cross-referenced by subject and author. Current awareness journals cover a wider range of primary journals than could ever be available in any one library. Examples include ... [Pg.318]


See other pages where Primary Journals is mentioned: [Pg.264]    [Pg.656]    [Pg.785]    [Pg.1]    [Pg.447]    [Pg.451]    [Pg.767]    [Pg.770]    [Pg.324]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.304]    [Pg.228]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.379]    [Pg.386]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.40]    [Pg.359]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.285]    [Pg.40]    [Pg.453]    [Pg.474]   


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