RSC - New J. Chem. latest articles
New J. Chem., 2024, Advance Article DOI: 10.1039/D3NJ04415G, Paper Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported Licence.Aline Dressler, Antoine Leydier, Agnès Grandjean Promising GNP based materials for uranium extraction : Impact of the density of functional groups on the uranium capacities...
New J. Chem., 2024, Accepted Manuscript DOI: 10.1039/D4NJ00814F, PaperJyoti Yadav, Manviri Rani, Uma Shanker Chromium (VI) regarded as a major pollution of the ecosystem because to its extremely hazardous and cancer-causing nature. Consequently, there is a great need for inexpensive, very sensitive Cr (VI)... The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal...
New J. Chem., 2024, Accepted Manuscript DOI: 10.1039/D4NJ00311J, CommunicationRam Singh Jat, Gautami Singh, M. Bhanuchandra A convenient and atom-economical protocol for the construction of multisubstituted 2-aminoquinoline N-oxides using readily available starting materials anthranil and arylacetonitrile has been reported. The KHMDS mediated process...
New J. Chem., 2024, Accepted Manuscript DOI: 10.1039/D3NJ05662G, PaperArindam Banerjee, Purnadas Ghosh, Soumyajit Hazra, Kousik Gayen, Niladri Hazra, Arun K. Nandi This report demonstrates a facile environmentally friendly synthesis of a trihybrid system (PBI-NP-GO) consisting of perylene bisimide appended peptide (PBI-UW) nanofibers, silver nanoparticles...
New J. Chem., 2024, Advance Article DOI: 10.1039/D4NJ00263F, CommunicationNicky Kumar Lamba, Pawan Choudhary, Jaidev Kaushik, Kumud Malika Tripathi, Shyam Kumar Choudhary, Sumit Kumar Sonkar Herein, we describe the possibility of deploying used solid CO2, also known as dry ice, as an exfoliating agent for thermal-assisted exfoliation of graphite, improving...
New J. Chem., 2024, Advance Article DOI: 10.1039/D4NJ01162G, PaperKaixuan Liu, Borong Lu, Ronghang Cui, Jinling Yin, Kai Zhu, Guiling Wang, Dianxue Cao, Ke Ye We present a simple self-supporting catalyst containing CoNi nanosheets grown on Co3O4 electrodes. In the DBHPFC test, it has a maximum power density of 108.5 mW cm−2, an open circuit potential...
Build your own newsfeed
Ready to give it a go?
Start a 14-day trial, no credit card required.