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The Supramolecular Compounds refer to organised multi-molecular
assemblies and associated phenomena. The stability and the
properties of these compounds strongly involve structural
three-dimensional (3D) information. The crystal itself can be
considered as a giant supermolecule. Thus, a thorough understanding
of crystal structures and crystal growth provides a unique
information on the intermolecular interactions. Indeed, each
crystal reflects in a particular way the recognition properties of
molecules. More so, modern crystallography allows to study in
detail two or three-component crystalline solids in which the
recognition processes can be seen from the structural standpoint.
Crystallography of smaller and smaller single crystals, faster and
faster experiments, time-resolved x-ray crystallography, are
extremely potent source of physico-chemical information. The
present Advanced Study Institute (A.S.I.) - which was planned five
years ago as the 22nd Course of the International School of
Crystallography (director: T. L. BLUNDELL), 1-11 June 1995, E.
Majorana Centre, Erice, Italy - is probably the first international
meeting specifically devoted to the Crystallography of
Supramolecular Compounds. The presence of crystallographers,
chemists and physicists enhanced the coherence of the typical
sequence: Conception and Design - Synthesis - Structure and
Visualisation - Properties. The interactive and interdisciplinary
character of this research is central to the development of general
structural models for a large spectrum of compounds: ionophores,
cryptates, fullerenes, calixarenes, cyclodextrins,
cyclotriveratrylenes, pillar type compounds, zeolites, hydrates,
solvates and others."
There is no doubt that the field of artificial membrane transport
using synthetic ionophores has advanced remarkably in the past 15
years due primarily to the synthesis of new ionophores. Even though
the theoretical framework substantially predated this activity, the
merging of theory with transport experiment has often been sketchy.
The purpose of this outline has been to examine key examples to
illustrate the underlying principles and to suggest how
experimental variables dominate the results obtained. To a very
good approximation the assumption of a "diffusion" regime is often
justified, is easily confirmed experimentally and provides a clear
framework for exploitation of the inherent selectivity of a given
ionophore. Thus for synthetic chemists who wish a "quick and nasty"
experiment to examine the question of selectivity, the recipe is
clear: a mixture containing all ions of interest in a standard
experiment for each ligand of interest using a moderately stirred
(100-200 rpm) cell and analysis of the mixture produced on the OUT
side of the cell at a fixed, small extent of transport. Together
with duplicates and controls, this modest set of experiments will
place the results on an unambiguous footing from which clear
conclusions about each ionophore's characteristics are readily
obtained. For those with more detailed interests in the transport
process the demands are correspondingly higher.
There is no doubt that the field of artificial membrane transport
using synthetic ionophores has advanced remarkably in the past 15
years due primarily to the synthesis of new ionophores. Even though
the theoretical framework substantially predated this activity, the
merging of theory with transport experiment has often been sketchy.
The purpose of this outline has been to examine key examples to
illustrate the underlying principles and to suggest how
experimental variables dominate the results obtained. To a very
good approximation the assumption of a "diffusion" regime is often
justified, is easily confirmed experimentally and provides a clear
framework for exploitation of the inherent selectivity of a given
ionophore. Thus for synthetic chemists who wish a "quick and nasty"
experiment to examine the question of selectivity, the recipe is
clear: a mixture containing all ions of interest in a standard
experiment for each ligand of interest using a moderately stirred
(100-200 rpm) cell and analysis of the mixture produced on the OUT
side of the cell at a fixed, small extent of transport. Together
with duplicates and controls, this modest set of experiments will
place the results on an unambiguous footing from which clear
conclusions about each ionophore's characteristics are readily
obtained. For those with more detailed interests in the transport
process the demands are correspondingly higher.
The Supramolecular Compounds refer to organised multi-molecular
assemblies and associated phenomena. The stability and the
properties of these compounds strongly involve structural
three-dimensional (3D) information. The crystal itself can be
considered as a giant supermolecule. Thus, a thorough understanding
of crystal structures and crystal growth provides a unique
information on the intermolecular interactions. Indeed, each
crystal reflects in a particular way the recognition properties of
molecules. More so, modern crystallography allows to study in
detail two- or three-component crystalline solids in which the
recognition processes can be seen from the structural standpoint.
Crystallography of smaller and smaller single crystals, faster and
faster experiments, time-resolved x-ray crystallography, are
extremely potent source of physico-chemical information. The
present Advanced Study Institute (A.S.I.) - which was planned five
years ago as the 22nd Course of the International School of
Crystallography (director: T. L. BLUNDELL), 1-11 June 1995, E.
Majorana Centre, Erice, Italy - is probably the first international
meeting specifically devoted to the Crystallography of
Supramolecular Compounds. The presence of crystallographers,
chemists and physicists enhanced the coherence of the typical
sequence: Conception and Design - Synthesis - Structure and
Visualisation - Properties. The interactive and interdisciplinary
character of this research is central to the development of general
structural models for a large spectrum of compounds: ionophores,
cryptates, fullerenes, calixarenes, cyclodextrins,
cyclotriveratrylenes, pillar type compounds, zeolites, hydrates,
solvates and others.
The contents of this volume originate from the joint Inclusion
Phenomenal Cyclodextrins Symposium held at Lancaster in July 1986.
Consisting of 50 extended ab stracts and 21 original contributions,
the reader will find an up-to-date survey of the current state of
research into, and applications of, inclusion compounds. Topics
covered range from cyclodextrin complexes and their use as media
for selective chemical reagents and their applications in
chromatography and in the pharmaceutical and agricultural areas;
the synthesis of new hosts, particularly those containing
hydrophobic cavities; the characterisation of inclusion compounds
using crystallographic and spectroscopic techniques; the use of
inclusion com pounds as enzyme models; macrocyclic complexes and
ionophores; to intercalates and zeolites. The Symposium was
extremely successful, being attended by some 250 delegates drawn
from 23 nations. It is hoped that the reader will recapture the
flavour of the meeting from reading this volume. xi Journal of
Inclusion Phenomena 5 (1987), 1-2. 1 (c) 1987 by D. Reidel
Publishing Company. Preface The joint meeting comprlslng the 4th
International Symposium on Inclusion Phenomena and the 3rd
International Symposium on Cyclodextrins was held on 20 - 25 July,
1986 at the University of Lancaster, Great Britain, and followed on
from the previous joint meeting held in Tokyo in July, 1984. The
meeting was sponsored by the Royal Society of Chemistry."
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Clathrate Compounds, Molecular Inclusion Phenomena, and Cyclodextrins - Proceedings of the Third International Symposium on Clathrate Compounds and Molecular Inclusion Phenomena and the Second International Symposium on Cyclodextrins, Tokyo, Japan, July 23-27, 1984 (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1984)
J.L. Atwood, J.E. Davies, T. Osa
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R4,695
Discovery Miles 46 950
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Joint Meeting comprisIng the 3rd International Symposium on
Clathrate Compounds and Molecular Inclusion Phenomena and the 2nd
International Symposium on Cyclodextrins was held on 23-27 July,
1984, in Tokyo, Japan. It was organized by the Japan Association
for Inclusion Chemistry together with the International
Organization Committee, with the auspices of sixteen societies and
associations in Japan. This event was the first joint meeting with
the hope of unifying the above two symposia. The program of the
symposium consisted of 142 papers, including 14 invited papers. The
invited papers and some selected topics were presented verbally,
and all the other 118 papers were displayed in poster sessions. The
symposium was held at Hoshi University in Tokyo. Due to the
multidisciplinary nature of the subjects treated, the scope and
subjects were grouped into two parts. In the first group, the
chemistry of cyclodextrins, synthetic organic hosts, inorganic and
metal complex hosts and layered hosts were treated. In the second
group applications in various fields, biomimetic aspects,
physicochemical aspects, selectivity, stereo-specificity and other
aspects were discussed. The scientific sessions were carried out in
a really vivid atmosphere. The number of participants viz 50 from
19 overseas countries and 253 domestic partici pants exceeded our
expectation."
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