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Search for "host–guest chemistry" in Full Text gives 53 result(s) in Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry.

Preparation, structures and preliminary host–guest studies of fluorinated syn-bis-quinoxaline molecular tweezers

  • Markus Etzkorn,
  • Jacob C. Timmerman,
  • Matthew D. Brooker,
  • Xin Yu and
  • Michael Gerken

Beilstein J. Org. Chem. 2010, 6, No. 39, doi:10.3762/bjoc.6.39

Graphical Abstract
  • stacking two pincer sidewalls, each from the outside (U···U geometry). HostGuest Chemistry Although none of the reported cyclooctadiene-derived syn-bis-quinoxaline scaffolds [19] has been established as a molecular tweezer, the general architecture with two syn-oriented aromatic sidewalls and a large π-π
  • units are matched appropriately. Further experiments employing complementary analytical techniques, e.g., isothermal calorimetry, as well as additional investigations of the hostguest chemistry with suitable, larger guest compounds, will provide detailed thermodynamic parameters of the host–guest
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Preliminary Communication
Published 20 Apr 2010

Molecular recognition of organic ammonium ions in solution using synthetic receptors

  • Andreas Späth and
  • Burkhard König

Beilstein J. Org. Chem. 2010, 6, No. 32, doi:10.3762/bjoc.6.32

Graphical Abstract
  • , mechanically-interlocked molecular architectures and molecular recognition in hostguest chemistry [19]. Analogous to biological systems, the formation and function of such supramolecular complexes occurs through a multiplicity of often difficult to differentiate non-covalent forces: Di- or polytopic receptors
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Review
Published 06 Apr 2010

Thematic series on supramolecular chemistry

  • Christoph A. Schalley

Beilstein J. Org. Chem. 2009, 5, No. 76, doi:10.3762/bjoc.5.76

Graphical Abstract
  • successfully transferred to neutral and anionic hosts. Nowadays, multivalent interactions start to play a significant role for host-guest chemistry. But supramolecular chemistry is much more than molecular recognition. Concepts such as templated synthesis, (hierarchical) self-assembly, and self-sorting have
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Editorial
Published 11 Dec 2009
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