Overview
- Authors:
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E. G. Rozantsev
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Institute of Chemical Physics, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow, USSR
- Editors:
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H. Ulrich
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Donald S. Gilmore Research Laboratories, The Upjohn Company, North Haven, USA
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Table of contents (10 chapters)
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- E. G. Rozantsev, H. Ulrich
Pages 1-11
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- E. G. Rozantsev, H. Ulrich
Pages 13-51
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- E. G. Rozantsev, H. Ulrich
Pages 53-66
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- E. G. Rozantsev, H. Ulrich
Pages 67-92
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- E. G. Rozantsev, H. Ulrich
Pages 93-117
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- E. G. Rozantsev, H. Ulrich
Pages 119-129
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- E. G. Rozantsev, H. Ulrich
Pages 131-161
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- E. G. Rozantsev, H. Ulrich
Pages 163-179
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- E. G. Rozantsev, H. Ulrich
Pages 181-202
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- E. G. Rozantsev, H. Ulrich
Pages 203-246
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Back Matter
Pages 247-249
About this book
In the short time since the first nitroxyl radical was obtained in 1959, a new branch of chemical science has arisen and taken shape-the chemistry of stable nitroxyl radicals. The present book was written by E. G. Rozantsev, one of the pioneers in this field and a prominent specialist on stable radicals at the Division of Chemical and Biological Processes of the Institute of Chemical Physics, Academy of Sciences of the USSR. His numerous papers have contributed greatly to the present situation, wherein nitroxyl radicals have acquired unusually wide popularity, including the fields of biology, medicine, chemis try, physics, biophysics, and instrument construction. A clear illustration of the astonishingly vigorous development of this new field of chemistry can be given by the enormous flow of information on the synthesis and use of nitroxyl radicals. There is no doubt that this monograph, which in part generalizes the results of many workers studying these radicals, will be received with interest by specialists working in this field. The author has not attempted to give an exhaustive account of the material. His aim is to introduce the reader to this new field and to show the wide possibilities for using radicals in scientific experiment. The voluminous bibliography, including many papers by the author himself which may not be well enough known to the American reader, will undoubtedly contribute to the usefulness of the monograph.
Authors, Editors and Affiliations
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Donald S. Gilmore Research Laboratories, The Upjohn Company, North Haven, USA
H. Ulrich
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Institute of Chemical Physics, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow, USSR
E. G. Rozantsev