Professor Dr Wolfgang Kaim, Institute of Inorganic Chemistry, University of Stuttgart, Germany
Wolfgang Kaim was born in 1951 near Frankfurt am Main, Germany, and studied chemistry at the universities of Frankfurt and Konstanz. After obtaining his Ph D with H. Bock in 1978 he spent a postdoctoral year with F.A. Cotton at the University of Texas A&M University. In 1987 he moved from the University of Frankfurt to a Full Professorship at the University of Stuttgart. His main research interests focus on the charge and electron transfer reactivity of molecular compounds and various aspects of coordination chemistry.
Dr Brigitte Schwederski, Institute of Inorganic Chemistry, University of Stuttgart, Germany
Brigitte Schwederski was born in 1959 in Recklinghausen, Germany. From 1977 to 1983 she studied chemistry and biology at the University of Bochum and in 1988 completed her Ph D in the research group of Dale W. Margerum at Purdue University, Indiana. Since 1988 she has been a Research Assistant at the University of Stuttgart. Her main research interests include inorganic model complexes of bioinorganic systems, their characteristics and reactivity.
Professor Dr. Axel Klein, Universitaet zu Koeln, Institut fuer Anorganische Chemie, Germany
Axel Klein is a Professor of Inorganic Chemistry at the University of Cologne, Germany. His research interests lie in the preparation and investigation of novel coordination compounds including organometallic derivatives, aiming at the rational design, preparation and use of coordination units with specific properties in mononuclear or oligonuclear complexes or as part of materials.
6 Ebooki wg Wolfgang Kaim
Wolfgang Kaim & Brigitte Schwederski: Bioinorganic Chemistry — Inorganic Elements in the Chemistry of Life
The field of Bioinorganic Chemistry has grown significantly in recent years; now one of the major sub-disciplines of Inorganic Chemistry, it has also pervaded other areas of the life sciences due to …
EPUB
Angielski
DRM
€49.99
Wolfgang Kaim & Brigitte Schwederski: Bioinorganic Chemistry — Inorganic Elements in the Chemistry of Life
The field of Bioinorganic Chemistry has grown significantly in recent years; now one of the major sub-disciplines of Inorganic Chemistry, it has also pervaded other areas of the life sciences due to …
PDF
Angielski
DRM
€49.99
Wolfgang Kaim & Axel Klein: Spectroelectrochemistry
Electrochemistry affects several relevant research subjects of physics, chemistry and biology such as the transformation of materials, the transfer of information (especially in living systems), or t …
PDF
Angielski
DRM
€134.99