Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « Inorganic Compunds »

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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Inorganic Compunds"

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Kucharska-zoń, Maria, Walter Wojciechowski et Jerzy Zoń. « Magnetic Properties of Coordination Compunds of 1-Aminólkylphosphonic Acids with Cobat(II) ». Phosphorus, Sulfur, and Silicon and the Related Elements 147, no 1 (1 janvier 1999) : 461. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10426509908053710.

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Acree, William, et James S. Chickos. « Phase Transition Enthalpy Measurements of Organic Compounds. An Update of Sublimation, Vaporization, and Fusion Enthalpies from 2016 to 2021 ». Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data 51, no 4 (1 décembre 2022) : 043101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0081916.

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The compendium of phase change enthalpies published in two parts in 2016 is updated to include new fusion, vaporization, and sublimation enthalpies published in the interim and includes some earlier data either previously missed or were unavailable. Also included in this article is an update of recent studies on the phase change enthalpies of polyaromatic hydrocarbons. Group values previously evaluated to adjust for temperature of phase changes are updated for aromatic compounds in view of recent experimental data. The new group parameters have been evaluated on the basis of their consistency in providing appropriate temperature adjustments to phase change enthalpies at T = 298 K as evaluated by a thermochemical cycle. This evaluation provides transition temperatures and about 1000 heats of fusion, 700 heats of vaporization, 500 heats of sublimation, and about 50 other heats of transitions for about 30 polyaromatic hydrocarbons and 1100 other molecules consisting of C1-C57 organic compunds, organometallics, inorganic compounds, and ionic liquids taken from about 900 references.
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Purenović, Jelena, Milovan M. Purenović et Marjan S. Ranđelović. « The Influence of Metal Microelements, Colloids and Organic Phase on Physical-chemical Properties and Processes in Peloids ». Chemia Naissensis 4, no 1 (2021) : 18–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.46793/chemn4.1.18p.

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The main emphasis in this study was on the modification of peloid characteristics through maturation processes, physical-chemical analysis of salty geothermal water and intact geomaterial, content of toxic heavy metals, radionuclides, and microorganisms in matured peloid, and physical-chemical processes that occur in a highly heterogeneous and microheterogeneous system solid-water. Main processes were considered to be mass transfer, colloidal processes, adsorption and surface compounding by macro- and micronutrients from salty mineral water with surface groups of intact geomaterial. This study indicated that inorganic and organic components of peloid could be in the form of colloids, suspended macro- and microparticles, ions and molecules. Colloidal silica had special importance in peloids. Due to low maximum solubility of silica, there were a number of processes in which coagulated and floculated particles were created during maturation, especially in the presence of metal cations (e.g., Fe3+ and Al3+) and colloidal metal hydroxides which noticeably reduced the solubility of silica. Single charged alkali metal cations caused coagulation of colloidal silica occupying bridging positions between negatively charged colloidal particles. Colloidal silica in peloid together with other micro- and macro phases, and with the help of numerous microelements, comes in interaction, building a complex surface and occluded compounds. In the multiphase system, very complex organic and inorganic compunds are formed, which are important for therapeutic purposes.
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Guibé, F., Yang Ting Xian et G. Balavoine. « Reduction of some polyhalogenato- and polyacetoxy-allylic compunds using tributyltin hydride in the presence or absence of palladium catalyst ». Journal of Organometallic Chemistry 306, no 2 (mai 1986) : 267–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0022-328x(00)99714-6.

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Parkins, A. W. « Book Review : Catlytic Reductive Carbonylation of Organic Nitro Compunds. S. Cenini and F. Ragaini. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordect, 1996. 339 + xi pages. �115. ISBN 0-7923-4307-7 ». Applied Organometallic Chemistry 12, no 7 (juillet 1998) : 520. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1099-0739(199807)12:7<520 ::aid-aoc748>3.0.co;2-q.

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Green, M. L. H. « Book Review : Gmelin Handbook of Inorganometallic Compounds ; Rhenium, Organorhenium Compunds. Part 4 : Mononuclear Compounds, 8th edn. Reinhard Albrecht and Herman Somer, Formula Index : Rainer Boher, Bernd Kalbskopf and Paul K�mpf.Editor and Chief Editor : Adolf Slawisch, 296 pages, �720, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1996, ISBN 3-540-93734-X, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1996, ISBN 0-387-93734-X ». Applied Organometallic Chemistry 12, no 7 (juillet 1998) : 519. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1099-0739(199807)12:7<519 ::aid-aoc1748>3.0.co;2-z.

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Amundson, N. R., A. Caboussat, J. W. He, A. V. Martynenko, V. B. Savarin, J. H. Seinfeld et K. Y. Yoo. « A new inorganic atmospheric aerosol phase equilibrium model (UHAERO) ». Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 6, no 4 (28 mars 2006) : 975–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-6-975-2006.

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Abstract. A variety of thermodynamic models have been developed to predict inorganic gas-aerosol equilibrium. To achieve computational efficiency a number of the models rely on a priori specification of the phases present in certain relative humidity regimes. Presented here is a new computational model, named UHAERO, that is both efficient and rigorously computes phase behavior without any a priori specification. The computational implementation is based on minimization of the Gibbs free energy using a primal-dual method, coupled to a Newton iteration. The mathematical details of the solution are given elsewhere. The model computes deliquescence behavior without any a priori specification of the relative humidities of deliquescence. Also included in the model is a formulation based on classical theory of nucleation kinetics that predicts crystallization behavior. Detailed phase diagrams of the sulfate/nitrate/ammonium/water system are presented as a function of relative humidity at 298.15 K over the complete space of composition.
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Amundson, N. R., A. Caboussat, J. W. He, A. V. Martynenko, V. B. Savarin, J. H. Seinfeld et K. Y. Yoo. « A computationally efficient inorganic atmospheric aerosol phase equilibrium model (UHAERO) ». Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions 5, no 5 (28 septembre 2005) : 9291–324. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acpd-5-9291-2005.

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Abstract. A variety of thermodynamic models have been developed to predict inorganic gas-aerosol equilibrium. To achieve computational efficiency a number of the models rely on a priori specification of the phases present in certain relative humidity regimes. Presented here is a new computational model, named UHAERO, that is both efficient and rigorously computes phase behavior without any a priori specification. The computational implementation is based on minimization of the Gibbs free energy using a primal-dual method, coupled to a Newton iteration. The mathematical details of the solution are given elsewhere. The model also computes deliquescence and crystallization behavior without any a priori specification of the relative humidities of deliquescence or crystallization. Detailed phase diagrams of the sulfate/nitrate/ammonium/water system are presented as a function of relative humidity at 298.15 K over the complete space of composition.
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Orr, J. C., et J. M. Epitalon. « Improved routines to model the ocean carbonate system : mocsy 2.0 ». Geoscientific Model Development 8, no 3 (9 mars 2015) : 485–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/gmd-8-485-2015.

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Abstract. Modelers compute ocean carbonate chemistry often based on code from the Ocean Carbon Cycle Model Intercomparison Project (OCMIP), last revised in 2005. Here we offer improved publicly available Fortran 95 routines to model the ocean carbonate system (mocsy 2.0). Both codes take as input dissolved inorganic carbon CT and total alkalinity AT, tracers that are conservative with respect to mixing and changes in temperature and salinity. Both use the same thermodynamic equilibria to compute surface-ocean pCO2 and simulate air–sea CO2 fluxes, but mocsy 2.0 uses a faster and safer algorithm (SolveSAPHE) to solve the alkalinity-pH equation, applicable even under extreme conditions. The OCMIP code computes only surface pCO2, while mocsy computes all other carbonate system variables throughout the water column. It also avoids three common model approximations: that density is constant, that modeled potential temperature is equal to in situ temperature, and that depth is equal to pressure. Errors from these approximations grow with depth, e.g., reaching 3% or more for pCO2, H+, and ΩA at 5000 m. The mocsy package uses the equilibrium constants recommended for best practices. It also offers two new options: (1) a recently reassessed total boron concentration BT that is 4% larger and (2) new K1 and K2 formulations designed to include low-salinity waters. Although these options enhance surface pCO2 by up to 7 μatm, individually, they should be avoided until (1) best-practice equations for K1 and K2 are reevaluated with the new BT and (2) formulations of K1 and K2 for low salinities are adjusted to be consistent among pH scales. The common modeling practice of neglecting alkalinity contributions from inorganic P and Si leads to substantial biases that could easily be avoided. With standard options for best practices, mocsy agrees with results from the CO2SYS package within 0.005% for the three inorganic carbon species (concentrations differ by less than 0.01 μmol kg−1). Yet by default, mocsy's deep-water fCO2 and pCO2 are many times larger than those from older packages, because they include pressure corrections for K0 and the fugacity coefficient.
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Hassanali, Ali A., Jérôme Cuny, Vincenzo Verdolino et Michele Parrinello. « Aqueous solutions : state of the art in ab initio molecular dynamics ». Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A : Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences 372, no 2011 (13 mars 2014) : 20120482. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2012.0482.

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The simulation of liquids by ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) has been a subject of intense activity over the last two decades. The significant increase in computational resources as well as the development of new and efficient algorithms has elevated this method to the status of a standard quantum mechanical tool that is used by both experimentalists and theoreticians. As AIMD computes the electronic structure from first principles, it is free of ad hoc parametrizations and has thus been applied to a large variety of physical and chemical problems. In particular, AIMD has provided microscopic insight into the structural and dynamical properties of aqueous solutions which are often challenging to probe experimentally. In this review, after a brief theoretical description of the Born–Oppenheimer and Car–Parrinello molecular dynamics formalisms, we show how AIMD has enhanced our understanding of the properties of liquid water and its constituent ions: the proton and the hydroxide ion. Thereafter, a broad overview of the application of AIMD to other aqueous systems, such as solvated organic molecules and inorganic ions, is presented. We also briefly describe the latest theoretical developments made in AIMD, such as methods for enhanced sampling and the inclusion of nuclear quantum effects.
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Livres sur le sujet "Inorganic Compunds"

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Suski, W., et T. Palewski. Magnetic Properties Non-Metallic Inorganic Compunds Based on Transition Elements. Springer Berlin / Heidelberg, 2003.

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Handbook of Infrared and Raman Spectra of Inorganic Compounds and Organic Salts, Volume 1 : Text and Explanations (Infrared Raman Spectral Analysis of Inorganic Compunds & Org). Academic Press, 1996.

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Putzig, Curtis L., M. Anne Leugers et Richard A. Nyquist. Handbook of Infrared and Raman Spectra of Inorganic Compounds and Organic Salts, Volume 1 : Text and Explanations (Infrared Raman Spectral Analysis of Inorganic Compunds & Org). Academic Press, 1996.

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