Search Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »
My library | Help | Advanced Book Search | Web History | Sign in

Books

Lanthanide and Actinide Chemistry

 (Google eBook)
Front Cover
0 Reviews
John Wiley & Sons, Jan 30, 2007 - Science - 280 pages
The only introduction into the exciting chemistry of Lanthanides and Actinides.
  • The book is based on a number of courses on "f elements"
  • The author has a long experience in teaching this field of chemistry
  • Lanthanides have become very common elements in research and technology applications; this book offers the basic knowledge
  • The book offers insights into a vast range of applications, from lasers to synthesis

The Inorganic Chemistry: A Textbook series reflects the pivotal role of modern inorganic and physical chemistry in a whole range of emerging areas, such as materials chemistry, green chemistry and bioinorganic chemistry, as well as providing a solid grounding in established areas such as solid state chemistry, coordination chemistry, main group chemistry and physical inorganic chemistry.

Lanthanide and Actinide Chemistry is a one-volume account of the Lanthanides (including scandium and yttrium), the Actinides and the Transactinide elements, intended as an introductory treatment for undergraduate and postgraduate students. The principal features of these elements are set out in detail, enabling clear comparison and contrast with the Transition Elements and Main Group metals.

The book covers the extraction of the elements from their ores and their purification, as well as the synthesis of the man-made elements; the properties of the elements and principal binary compounds; detailed accounts of their coordination chemistry and organometallic chemistry, from both preparative and structural viewpoints, with a clear explanation of the factors responsible for the adoption of particular coordination numbers; spectroscopy and magnetism, especially for the lanthanides, with case studies and accounts of applications in areas like magnetic resonance imaging, lasers and luminescence; nuclear separations and problems in waste disposal for the radioactive elements, particularly in the context of plutonium.

Latest developments are covered in areas like the synthesis of the latest man-made elements, whilst there is a whole chapter on the application of lanthanide compounds in synthetic organic chemistry.

End-of-chapter questions suitable for tutorial discussions are provided, whilst there is a very comprehensive bibliography providing ready access to further reading on all topics.

  

What people are saying - Write a review

We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.

Related books

Contents

Preface
xv
1 Introduction to the Lanthanides
1
2 The Lanthanides Principles and Energetics
9
3 The Lanthanide Elements and Simple Binary Compounds
23
4 Coordination Chemistry of the Lanthanides
35
5 Electronic and Magnetic Properties of the Lanthanides
61
6 Organometallic Chemistry of the Lanthanides
89
7 The Misfits Scandium Yttrium and Promethium
107
9 Introduction to the Actinides
145
10 Binary Compounds of the Actinides
155
11 Coordination Chemistry of the Actinides
173
12 Electronic and Magnetic Properties of the Actinides
201
13 Organometallic Chemistry of the Actinides
209
14 Synthesis of the Transactinides and their Chemistry
225
Bibliography
237
Index
253

8 The Lanthanides and Scandium in Organic Chemistry
121

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

References to this book

From Google Scholar

Increasing the luminescence of lanthanide complexes
Robert C Leif, Lidia M Vallarino, Margie C Becker, Sean Yang - 2006 - Cytometry Part A
New Opportunities for Lanthanide Luminescence
Jean-Claude G Bünzli, Steve Comby, Anne-Sophie Chauvin, Caroline DB Vandevyver - 2007 - Journal of Rare Earths
Scandium, yttrium, the lanthanides
SA Cotton - 2007 - Annual Reports Section" A"(Inorganic Chemistry)
Dendritic Chelating Agents. 2. U (VI) Binding to Poly (amidoamine ...
MAMADOUS DIALLO, JAMESH JOHNSON JR, WILLIAMA GODDARDIII - 2008 - Environ. Sci. Technol
All Scholar search results »

About the author (2007)

Dr Simon Cotton obtained his PhD at Imperial College London. After postdoctoral research and teaching appointments at Queen Mary College, London, and the University of East Anglia, he has taught chemistry in several different schools, and has been at Uppingham School since 1996. From 1984 until 1997, he was Editor of Lanthanide and Actinide Compounds for the Dictionary of Organometallic Compounds and the Dictionary of Inorganic Compounds. He authored the account of Lanthanide Coordination Chemistry for the 2nd edition of Comprehensive Coordination Chemistry (Pergamon) as well as the accounts of Lanthanide Inorganic and Coordination Chemistry for both the 1st and 2nd editions of the Encyclopedia of Inorganic Chemistry (Wiley).

Bibliographic information