Free Standard AU & NZ Shipping For All Book Orders Over $80!
Register      Login
Australian Journal of Chemistry Australian Journal of Chemistry Society
An international journal for chemical science
RESEARCH FRONT

Single Crystal to Single Crystal Transformations

Leonard J. Barbour A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Department of Chemistry, University of Stellenbosch, 7602 Stellenbosch, South Africa. Email: ljb@sun.ac.za




Len Barbour was born in Pretoria, South Africa, in 1965. In 1994 he obtained his Ph.D. under the supervision of Luigi Nassimbeni at the University of Cape Town where he investigated thermodynamic and structural aspects of solvate formation and decomposition. He then undertook a postdoctoral fellowship with Jerry Atwood at the University of Missouri-Columbia where he continued to pursue his interest in supramolecular chemistry and where in 1997 he was appointed as Research Assistant Professor. In 2003 he moved back to South Africa to the University of Stellenbosch. He was promoted to Professor of Chemistry in 2005 and currently holds a South African Research Chair in Nanostructured Functional Materials. His research interests include the study of solid-state phenomena with particular emphasis on the design and characterization of porous materials for gas sorption.

Australian Journal of Chemistry 59(9) 595-596 https://doi.org/10.1071/CH06355
Submitted: 2 October 2006  Accepted: 2 October 2006   Published: 19 October 2006


References


[1]   M. Albrecht, M. Lutz, A. L. Spek, G. van Koten, Nature 2000, 406,  970.
        | Crossref |  GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |  
        | Crossref |  GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |  
        | Crossref |  GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |  
        | Crossref |  GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |  
        | Crossref |  GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |   This insightful article does not address the issue of single-crystal transformations but rather discusses the use of anisotropic displacement parameters as indicators of rigid-body motion in crystals
        | Crossref |  GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |  
        | Crossref |  GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |  
        | Crossref |  GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |  
        | Crossref |  GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |  
        | Crossref |  GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |  
        | Crossref |  GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |  
        | Crossref |  GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |  open url image1

[13]   This, of course, is a statement of degree and it is not within the scope of this text to parameterize the extent to which structures change.