Inorganic Syntheses

Inorganic Syntheses is a book series which aims to publish "detailed and foolproof" procedures for the synthesis of inorganic compounds.[1][2] Although this series of books are edited, they usually are referenced like a journal, without mentioning the names of the checkers (referees) or the editor. A similar format is usually followed for the series Organic Syntheses.

Inorganic Syntheses
DisciplineInorganic chemistry
LanguageEnglish
Publication details
History1939-present
Publisher
Inorganic Syntheses Organization, John Wiley & Sons
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Inorg. Synth.
Indexing
ISSN1934-4716
Links

Volumes

Volume (Year) ISBN Editor(s), Affiliation(s)
v. 37 (2018)9781119477822Philip P. Power, University of California, Davis
v. 36 (2014)1-118-74487-1Alfred P. Sattleberger, Argonne National Lab
Gregory S. Girolami, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
v. 35 (2010)0-471-68255-4Thomas B. Rauchfuss, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
v. 34 (2004)0-471-64750-0John R. Shapley, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
v. 33 (2002)0-471-20825-6Dimitri Coucouvanis, University of Michigan
v. 32 (1998)0-471-24921-1Marcetta Y. Darensbourg, Texas A&M University
v. 31 (1997)0-471-15288-9Alan H. Cowley, University of Texas at Austin
v. 30 (1995)0-471-30508-1Donald W. Murphy, AT&T Bell Laboratories
Leonard V. Interrante, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
v. 29 (1992)0-471-54470-1Russell N. Grimes, University of Virginia
v. 28 (1990)0-471-52619-3Robert J. Angelici, Iowa State University
v. 27 (1990)0-471-50976-0Alvin P. Ginsburg, AT&T Bell Laboratories
v. 26 (1989)0-471-50485-8Herbert D. Kaesz, University of California, Los Angeles
v. 25 (1989)0-471-61874-8Harry R. Allcock, Pennsylvania State University
v. 24 (1986)0-471-83441-6Jean’ne M. Shreeve, University of Idaho
v. 23 (1985)0-471-81873-9Stanley Kirschner, Wayne State University
v. 22 (1983)0-471-88887-7Smith L. Holt, Jr., Oklahoma State University
v. 21 (1982)0-471-86520-6John P. Fackler, Jr., Case Western Reserve University
v. 20 (1980)0-471-07715-1Daryle H. Busch, Ohio State University
v. 19 (1979)0-471-04542-XDuward F. Shriver, Northwestern University
v. 18 (1978)0-471-03393-6Bodie E. Douglas, University of Pittsburgh
v. 17 (1977)0-07-044327-0Alan G. MacDiarmid, University of Pennsylvania
v. 16 (1976)0-07-004015-xFred Basolo, Northwestern University
v. 15 (1974)0-07-048521-6George W. Parshall, E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company
v. 14 (1973)07-071320-0Aaron Wold, Brown University
John K. Ruff, University of Georgia
v. 13 (1972)07-013208-9F. A. Cotton, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
v. 12 (1970)07-048517-8Robert W. Parry, University of Utah
v. 11 (1968)NAWilliam L. Jolly, University of California, Berkeley
v. 10 (1967)NAEarl L. Muetterties, E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company
v. 9 (1967)NAS. Young Tyree, Jr., College of William & Mary
v. 8 (1966)NAHenry F. Holtzclaw, Jr., University of Nebraska
v. 7 (1963)NAJacob Kleinberg, University of Kansas
v. 6 (1960)NAEugene G. Rochow, Harvard University
v. 5 (1957)NATherald Moeller, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
v. 4 (1953)NAJohn C. Bailar, Jr., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
v. 3 (1950)NALudwig Audrieth, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
v. 2 (1946)NAW. Conard Fernelius, Syracuse University
v. 1 (1939)NAHarold Simmons Booth, Western Reserve University
gollark: The code you call simple is long and verbose. The waitgroup thing is a hack because go's got no generics for some sort of parallel map function.
gollark: Haskell is higher level. That means there's less noise to get in the way, unlike Go. Or at least would be, but insane Haskellers add more lots.
gollark: Green threads aren't exactly a new idea. Rust has libraries for that.
gollark: Anyway, they should just have added generics. They improve readability by allowing abstraction.
gollark: Sorry, what "power"?

See also

References

  1. About Inorganic Syntheses. Inorganic Syntheses. 32. Inorganic Syntheses. 1998. doi:10.1002/SERIES2146. ISBN 9780470132630.
  2. Inorganic Syntheses Organization.


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