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The inclusion of small guest molecules within suitable host compounds results in constrained systems that imbue novel properties upon the incarcerated organic substrates. Supramolecular tactics are becoming widely employed and this treatise spotlights them. Often, the impact of encapsulation on product formation is substantial. The use of constrained systems offers the means to steer reactions along desired pathways. A broad overview of various supramolecular approaches aimed to manipulate chemical reactions are featured. The following topics are covered in detail: - general concepts governing the assembly of the substrate with the reaction vessel - preparation of molecular reactors - stabil...
You're probably wondering why an entrepreneur would isolate himself for 12 days without food and water? Extreme fatigue, health problems, a challenge and a need for answers... However, two days before his departure, his intuition led him to write a book. But it is when he arrives in the house that he discovers what really awaits him... What do we learn from the story of this unique experience? In a direct and authentic style, he reveals to us that nothing can resist the power of conviction: Our determination has the power to transform the impossible into possible, here and now.
André Herford/Herrfort was born in 1812 in Ste. Marie-aux-Mines, Alsace, France. He married Anna Somer and they had three children by 1839. Shortly thereafter, André died and Anna and her three children traveled to Canada. One son died on the ship over. Anna and her sons, Andrew and John, settled in the Wilmot or East Zorra Amish-Mennonite communities in southwestern Ontario. Both sons married and had large families. In 1892, part of John's family migrated to Elkton, Michigan while the majority of the Herrforts remained in Ontario. Descendants live in Canada and the United States.
The fascinating autobiographical reflections of Nobel Prizewinner George Olah How did a young man who grew up in Hungary between the two WorldWars go from cleaning rubble and moving pianos at the end of WorldWar II in the Budapest Opera House to winning the Nobel Prize inChemistry? George Olah takes us on a remarkable journey fromBudapest to Cleveland to Los Angeles-with a stopover in Stockholm,of course. An innovative scientist, George Olah is truly one of akind, whose amazing research into extremely strong acids and theirnew chemistry yielded what is now commonly known as superacidic"magic acid chemistry." A Life of Magic Chemistry is an intimate look atthe many journeys that George Olah h...
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