Crystal engineering or crystal mysticism? A case study

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Publication Type Journal Article
School or College College of Science
Department Chemistry
Creator Miller, Joel Steven
Title Crystal engineering or crystal mysticism? A case study
Date 2005
Description The de novo design and synthesis of a crystalline motif of a substance is a holy grail for a growing number of organic and inorganic synthetic chemists. Achievement of targeted architectural arrangements is less reliable as the complexity increases. Simple substitution of, for example, alkyl pendant groups with homologues1 are most prone to success. Enthusiasts in this area have dubbed this evolving realm of research as 'crystal engineering,'2 and 'reticular chemistry,' as "...the practice of logical synthesis must begin with knowledge of the target network 'blueprint' and identification of the required building blocks for its assembly. The process is central to our ability to achieve true design of solid state materials: we refer to its implementation as reticular chemistry."3 The flurry of activity has led to a plethora of fascinating new structures and materials, many conferences, symposia, monographs, and scientific papers in all of the leading journals, not to mention a glut of new jargon.
Type Text
Publisher Royal Society of Chemistry
First Page 458
Last Page 461
Subject Synthesis, Structure, Chemistry
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Miller, J. S. (2005). Crystal engineering or crystal mysticism? A case study. CrystEngComm, 7, 458-61.
Rights Management (c)Royal Society of Chemistry
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 525,010 bytes
Identifier ir-main,5681
ARK ark:/87278/s6n30fcr
Setname ir_uspace
ID 705246
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6n30fcr
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