Noyes W.A., Hammond G.S., Pitts J.N. (eds.). Wiley. 1968. 486
p.
With the increased sophistication in experiment and interpretation since that time, photochemists have made substantial progress in achieving the fundamental objective of photochemistry: elucidation of the detailed history of a molecule that absorbs radiation. The scope of this objective is so broad and the systems to be studied are so many that there is little danger of exhusting the subject. We hope that this series will reflect the frontiers of photochemistry as they develop in the future.
Contents
Type II Photooxygenation Reactions in Solution
The Photochemistry of Cobalt (III) and Chromium (III) Complexes in Solution
Advances in the Photochemistry of Nucleic Acid Derivatives
The Photocycloaddition of Carbonyl Compounds to Unsaturated Systems: The Syntheses of Oxetanes
Electron Transfer Luminescence in Solution
Author Index
Subject Index
Cumulative Index
With the increased sophistication in experiment and interpretation since that time, photochemists have made substantial progress in achieving the fundamental objective of photochemistry: elucidation of the detailed history of a molecule that absorbs radiation. The scope of this objective is so broad and the systems to be studied are so many that there is little danger of exhusting the subject. We hope that this series will reflect the frontiers of photochemistry as they develop in the future.
Contents
Type II Photooxygenation Reactions in Solution
The Photochemistry of Cobalt (III) and Chromium (III) Complexes in Solution
Advances in the Photochemistry of Nucleic Acid Derivatives
The Photocycloaddition of Carbonyl Compounds to Unsaturated Systems: The Syntheses of Oxetanes
Electron Transfer Luminescence in Solution
Author Index
Subject Index
Cumulative Index