194,226 research outputs found

    Evidence for erbium-erbium energy migration in erbium(III) bis(perfluoro-p-tolyl)phosphinate

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    Copyright 2008 American Institute of Physics. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. This article appeared in Applied Physics Letters 92, 103303 (2008) and may be found at

    tan n tan v

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    tan n1. To convert skin or hide into leather b. To treat (fishing nets, sails, 1601-1905Used IUsed I and SupNot usedonly tan n is used in DNE, not tan

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed

    Dispelling the Myths Behind First-author Citation Counts

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    We conducted a full-scale evaluative citation analysis study of scholars in the XML research field to explore just how different from each other author rankings resulting from different citation counting methods actually are, and to demonstrate the capability of emerging data and tools on the Web in supporting more realistic citation counting methods. Our results contest some common arguments for the continued use of first-author citation counts in the evaluation of scholars, such as high correlations between author rankings by first-author citation counts and other citation counting methods, and high costs of using more realistic citation counting methods that are not well-supported by the ISI databases. It is argued that increasingly available digital full text research papers make it possible for citation analysis studies to go beyond what the ISI databases have directly supported and to employ more sophisticated methods

    Synthesis of Highly Functionalised Furo[3,4-b]pyrans: Towards the Fungal Metabolite (−)-TAN-2483B

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    Carbohydrate-derived cyclopropanes combine both the stereochemical wealth of carbohydrates and the reactivity of cyclopropanes. A diverse variety of reaction modes for these cyclopropyl carbohydrates can be harnessed for the synthesis of natural products and other targets. The natural products (−)-TAN-2483A and (−)-TAN-2483B are fungal secondary metabolites displaying a variety of bioactivities such as inhibition of c-src kinase action and parathyroid hormone-induced bone resorption. This thesis described several synthetic approaches to the natural product (−)-TAN-2483B and analogues of (−)-TAN-2483B employing cyclopropane ring expansion. The synthetic route to (−)-TAN-2483B began with the readily available substrate D-mannose. The pyran ring unsaturation of the natural product was established by a cyclopropanation-ring expansion sequence. A synthetic strategy via dichlorocyclopropane-based intermediates is described in chapter 2. This being unsuccessful, an alternative approach via 2-fomyl-glycal was developed in chapter 3. The chapter 2 and 3 provided a solid background for the achievement of the analogues synthesis illustrated in chapter 4 via dibromocyclopropane. Lewis acid-mediated alkynylation followed by Pdcatalysed carbonylative lactonisation was successfully utilised in the revelation of the furo[3,4-b]pyran ring skeleton. This route afforded analogues of TAN-2483B; the Z-and E-unsaturated ethyl esters 140 and 141 and hydroxy(−)-TAN-2483B 145. The total synthesis of (−)-TAN-2483B was not achieved due to unforeseen obstacles encountered in the deoxygenation of the side arm of 335 (Chapter 4) into the E-propenyl side arm of (−)-TAN-2483B

    Physical origin of Davydov splitting and resonant Raman spectroscopy of Davydov components in multilayer MoTe2

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    We systematically study the high-resolution and polarized Raman spectra of multilayer (ML) MoTe2. The layer-breathing (LB) and shear (C) modes are observed in the ultralow-frequency region, which are used to quantitatively evaluate the interlayer coupling in ML MoTe2 based on the linear chain model, in which only the nearest interlayer coupling is considered. The Raman spectra on three different substrates verify the negligible substrate effect on the phonon frequencies of ML MoTe2. Ten excitation energies are used to measure the high-frequency modes of N-layer MoTe2 (NL MoTe2; N is an integer). Under the resonant excitation condition, we observe N-dependent Davydov components in ML MoTe2, originating from the Raman-active A(1)' (A(1g)(2)) modes at similar to 172 cm(-1). More than two Davydov components are observed in NL MoTe2 for N > 4 by Raman spectroscopy. The N-dependent Davydov components are further investigated based on the symmetry analysis. A van der Waals model only considering the nearest interlayer coupling has been proposed to well understand the Davydov splitting of high-frequency A(1)' (A(1g)(2)) modes. The different resonant profiles for the two Davydov components in 3L MoTe2 indicate that proper excitation energy of similar to 1.8 - 2.2 eV must be chosen to observe the Davydov splitting in ML MoTe2. Our work presents a simple way to identify layer number of ultrathin MoTe2 flakes by the corresponding number and peak position of Davydov components. Our work also provides a direct evidence from Raman spectroscopy of how the nearest van der Waals interactions significantly affect the frequency of the high-frequency intralayer phonon modes in multilayer MoTe2 and expands the understanding on the lattice vibrations and interlayer coupling of transition metal dichalcogenides and other two-dimensional materials.National Basic Research Program of China [2013CB921901, 2012CB932703]; National Natural Science Foundation of China [11225421, 11434010, 11474277, 61125402, 51172004, 11474007]SCI(E)[email protected]; [email protected]

    Data appendix for: Holocene relative sea-level histories of tropical islands

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    This is the data appendix for the PhD thesis: Tan, F. (2023). Holocene relative sea-level histories of tropical islands. The dataset contains nine excel files. Tables A6 to A10 are supporting tables for appendix A; tables B4 to B5 are are supporting tables for appendix B; tables C1 to C2 are are supporting tables for appendix C.</p

    Synthesis of (−)-TAN-2483A. Revision of the Structures and Syntheses of (±)-FD-211 (Waol A) and (±)-FD-212 (Waol B)

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    The structure of waol A has been revised from 1 to 6, the vinylogue of TAN-2483 A (5). Aldol reaction of 10b(c) with 2,4-hexadienal (11) affords 9b(c), which is subjected to iodoetherification with bis(sym-collidine)IPF6 to provide 8b(c). Treatment with Et3N in CH2Cl2 completes three-step syntheses of TAN-2483A (5) and waol A (6)

    Synthesis of (−)-TAN-2483A. Revision of the Structures and Syntheses of (±)-FD-211 (Waol A) and (±)-FD-212 (Waol B)

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    The structure of waol A has been revised from 1 to 6, the vinylogue of TAN-2483 A (5). Aldol reaction of 10b(c) with 2,4-hexadienal (11) affords 9b(c), which is subjected to iodoetherification with bis(sym-collidine)IPF6 to provide 8b(c). Treatment with Et3N in CH2Cl2 completes three-step syntheses of TAN-2483A (5) and waol A (6)

    Toward the Synthesis of (–)-TAN-2483B Lactam Analogues

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    Natural products continue to be an abundant source of lead compounds for drug discovery and development. (–)-TAN-2483A and (–)-TAN-2483B, isolated from the culture of a filamentous fungus, incorporate an unusual furo[3,4-b]pyran-5-one scaffold. TAN-2483A was initially reported to inhibit the c-Src tyrosine kinase enzyme, a potential anticancer target, and parathyroid hormone-induced bone resorption. TAN-2483B, on the other hand, was not isolated in sufficient quantities for biological testing. The synthesis of TAN-2483B is therefore desirable from a drug discovery perspective. Several analogues of TAN-2483B that are functionalised at the propenyl sidechain have previously been synthesised in the Harvey group and have shown promising biological activity. For example, the (Z)-ethyl ester analogue showed micromolar inhibition of HL-60 cells and Bruton’s tyrosine kinase, a protein involved in B-cell maturation that is implicated in certain cancers. The lactone moiety of TAN-2483B and its sidechain analogues, however, appears to be unstable to nucleophilic attack. The aim of this thesis was to investigate the viability of a synthetic route toward lactam analogues of TAN-2483B. It was proposed that substituting the lactone for a lactam would increase the stability of the compound in nucleophilic media. Moreover, the lactam nitrogen may provide a site for further functionalisation of the compound for future structure-activity relationship studies. Because installation of the (Z)-ethyl ester sidechain via Wittig conditions has previously been found to be more facile than installation of the (E)-propenyl sidechain found in the natural product, investigations into forming the lactam ring system were carried out on the ethyl ester advanced intermediates. Reductive amination of a ketone intermediate was envisaged to install the amine prior to a palladium-catalysed carbonylation/lactam formation step. The promising bioactivity of the (Z)-ethyl ester analogue was anticipated to be retained in the target lactam analogues. It was found that the substrates of the proposed reductive amination, the advanced ketone intermediates, were incompatible with the tested conditions, presumably due to base sensitivity. Three by-products from the reductive amination experiments were isolated and tentatively characterised by NMR spectroscopy and HRMS. An alternative route toward lactam analogues of TAN-2483B, via intermediate amines accessed by the substitution of an activated alcohol, was briefly investigated with encouraging results. Further optimisation of the synthetic route toward analogues of TAN-2483B was also achieved. Removal of a purification step enabled the more expedient two-step synthesis of a diol intermediate. The two-step transformation to (Z)- and (E)-ethyl ester intermediates, via sodium periodate-mediated diol cleavage and Wittig olefination, proceeded in the highest yield obtained to date. Investigations into the desilylation of a trimethylsilyl-protected acetylene were also conducted. Although lactam analogues of TAN-2483B were not obtained in this study, progress was made toward their synthesis. The alternative route toward amines that was briefly explored here appears promising, and work is ongoing in the Harvey group to access lactam (and other) analogues of TAN-2483B, in addition to the natural product itself
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