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      The Chemical Imagination at Work inVery Tight Places

      , , ,
      Angewandte Chemie International Edition
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Diamond-anvil-cell and shock-wave technologies now permit the study of matter under multimegabar pressure (that is, of several hundred GPa). The properties of matter in this pressure regime differ drastically from those known at 1 atm (about 10(5) Pa). Just how different chemistry is at high pressure and what role chemical intuition for bonding and structure can have in understanding matter at high pressure will be explored in this account. We will discuss in detail an overlapping hierarchy of responses to increased density: a) squeezing out van der Waals space (for molecular crystals); b) increasing coordination; c) decreasing the length of covalent bonds and the size of anions; and d) in an extreme regime, moving electrons off atoms and generating new modes of correlation. Examples of the startling chemistry and physics that emerge under such extreme conditions will alternate in this account with qualitative chemical ideas about the bonding involved.

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          Stability of Polyatomic Molecules in Degenerate Electronic States. I. Orbital Degeneracy

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            Fundamental principles and applications of natural gas hydrates.

            E Sloan (2003)
            Natural gas hydrates are solid, non-stoichiometric compounds of small gas molecules and water. They form when the constituents come into contact at low temperature and high pressure. The physical properties of these compounds, most notably that they are non-flowing crystalline solids that are denser than typical fluid hydrocarbons and that the gas molecules they contain are effectively compressed, give rise to numerous applications in the broad areas of energy and climate effects. In particular, they have an important bearing on flow assurance and safety issues in oil and gas pipelines, they offer a largely unexploited means of energy recovery and transportation, and they could play a significant role in past and future climate change.
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              Constants of diatomic molecules

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Angewandte Chemie International Edition
                Angew. Chem. Int. Ed.
                Wiley
                14337851
                15213773
                May 11 2007
                May 11 2007
                : 46
                : 20
                : 3620-3642
                Article
                10.1002/anie.200602485
                17477335
                a8b702c6-3240-4db4-a0e7-09deb3bfd1aa
                © 2007

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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