The papers included in this issue of ECS Transactions were originally presented in the symposium ¿Manuel M. Baizer Award Symposium on Organic Electrochemistry¿, held during the 213th meeting of The Electrochemical Society, in Phoenix, Arizona from May 18 to 23, 2008.
The papers included in this issue of ECS Transactions were originally presented in the symposium ¿Manuel M. Baizer Award Symposium on Organic Electrochemistry¿, held during the 217th meeting of The Electrochemical Society, in Vancouver, Canada, from April 25 to 30, 2010.
Baizer (1914-1988) was the foremost internationally recognized authority on organic electrosynthesis. In this festschrift , derived from a memorial symposium held in Montreal, May 1990, as part of the 177th meeting of the Electrochemical Society, and also marking the 25th anniversary of electroorgan
Papers presented at a symposium in Toronto, June 1988, trace the development of the field from the 1800 discovery that hydrogen and oxygen come from water to the flashlight batteries and cheap throw- away alumnimum of today. The 39 chapters discuss the major events and technologies of classical and fundamental electrochemistry, electrosynthesis, electroanalytic chemistry, industrial electrochemistry, electrode systems, and pH measurement. Contains information otherwise not collected, so of interest to science historians as well as specialists. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
This book is based on the George Fisher Baker Lecture given by Jean-Michel Savéant at Cornell University in Fall 2002. * The first book focusing on molecular electrochemistry * Relates to other fields, including photochemistry and biochemistry * Outlines clearly the connection between concepts, experimental illustrations, proofs and supporting methods * Appendixes to provide rigorous demonstrations to prevent an overload of algebra in the main text * Applications-oriented, focused on analyzing the results obtained rather than the methodology
Among the topics of interest to organic chemists today are the versatility and uniqueness of electrolysis procedures in organic synthesis, as well as the latest advances in methodology, including basic concepts for the design of electrolysis conditions and apparatus. The International Symposium on Electroorganic Synthesis met in Kurashiki, Japan, in September 1997 for lectures on all aspects of current research in the field. This volume comprising the papers from the symposium consists of two parts. Part I, Electrooxidation, includes papers on alcohols and phenols, olefins and aromatics, halogenation, polymers, and electrodes, among others. Included in Part II, Electroreduction, are papers on carbonyl compounds, halogen-containing compounds, reaction with EG bases, and metal complexes. The novel trends presented here will be of special interest to researchers and graduate students in electroorganic chemistry and are a valuable resource for all organic chemists.