Editing Molecule:100843
From ChemWiki
molecule
Molecule is used on following pages
topic
- Photocatalytic CO2 conversion to CO
- Homogeneous photocatalytic CO2 conversion
- Photocatalytic CO2 conversion to HCOOH
- Photocatalytic CO2 conversion to CH4
publication
- Nickel(II) pincer complexes demonstrate that the remote substituent controls catalytic carbon dioxide reduction
- Visible-Light Photoredox Catalysis: Selective Reduction of Carbon Dioxide to Carbon Monoxide by a Nickel N-Heterocyclic Carbene–Isoquinoline Complex
- Metal-free reduction of CO2 to formate using a photochemical organohydride-catalyst recycling strategy
- Selective and Efficient Photocatalytic CO2 Reduction to CO Using Visible Light and an Iron-Based Homogeneous Catalyst
- Molecular Catalysis of the Electrochemical and Photochemical Reduction of CO2 with Earth-Abundant Metal Complexes. Selective Production of CO vs HCOOH by Switching of the Metal Center
- Visible-light-driven methane formation from CO2 with a molecular iron catalyst
- Toward Visible-Light Photochemical CO2‑to-CH4 Conversion in Aqueous Solutions Using Sensitized Molecular Catalysis
- Durable Solar-Powered Systems with Ni-Catalysts for Conversion of CO2 or CO to CH4
- Exchange Coupling Determines Metal-Dependent Efficiency for Iron- and Cobalt-Catalyzed Photochemical CO2 Reduction
investigation
- Molecular Catalysis of the Electrochemical and Photochemical Reduction of CO2 with Earth-Abundant Metal Complexes. Selective Production of CO vs HCOOH by Switching of the Metal Center/Table 1
- Nickel(II) pincer complexes demonstrate that the remote substituent controls catalytic carbon dioxide reduction/Photocatalytic CO2 reduction under varied conditions
- Visible-Light Photoredox Catalysis: Selective Reduction of Carbon Dioxide to Carbon Monoxide by a Nickel N-Heterocyclic Carbene–Isoquinoline Complex/Table 1
- Visible-light-driven methane formation from CO2 with a molecular iron catalyst/Table 1
- Visible-light-driven methane formation from CO2 with a molecular iron catalyst/Table 2 CO gas
- Toward Visible-Light Photochemical CO2‑to-CH4 Conversion in Aqueous Solutions Using Sensitized Molecular Catalysis/Photocatalytic reduction of CO2: conditions optimization
- Metal-free reduction of CO2 to formate using a photochemical organohydride-catalyst recycling strategy/photocatalytic CO2 conversion under different conditions
- Selective and Efficient Photocatalytic CO2 Reduction to CO Using Visible Light and an Iron-Based Homogeneous Catalyst/photocatalytic conversion of CO2 to CO
- Durable Solar-Powered Systems with Ni-Catalysts for Conversion of CO2 or CO to CH4/Results for different electron donors and proton donors
- Exchange Coupling Determines Metal-Dependent Efficiency for Iron- and Cobalt-Catalyzed Photochemical CO2 Reduction/Iron-Catalyzed Photochemical CO2 Reduction under diverse conditions
- Exchange Coupling Determines Metal-Dependent Efficiency for Iron- and Cobalt-Catalyzed Photochemical CO2 Reduction/Iron-Catalyzed Photochemical CO2 Reduction under diverse conditions error
- Exchange Coupling Determines Metal-Dependent Efficiency for Iron- and Cobalt-Catalyzed Photochemical CO2 Reduction/Table 2 Conversion with Co catalyst
- Exchange Coupling Determines Metal-Dependent Efficiency for Iron- and Cobalt-Catalyzed Photochemical CO2 Reduction/Table 2 conversion with Co catalyst
- Exchange Coupling Determines Metal-Dependent Efficiency for Iron- and Cobalt-Catalyzed Photochemical CO2 Reduction/Table 2 Co catalyst testing
- Exchange Coupling Determines Metal-Dependent Efficiency for Iron- and Cobalt-Catalyzed Photochemical CO2 Reduction/testtest2
- Exchange Coupling Determines Metal-Dependent Efficiency for Iron- and Cobalt-Catalyzed Photochemical CO2 Reduction/Results obtained with Co2+ catalyst
- Exchange Coupling Determines Metal-Dependent Efficiency for Iron- and Cobalt-Catalyzed Photochemical CO2 Reduction/results CO2+ experiments
- Exchange Coupling Determines Metal-Dependent Efficiency for Iron- and Cobalt-Catalyzed Photochemical CO2 Reduction/CO2+ results from SI
- Exchange Coupling Determines Metal-Dependent Efficiency for Iron- and Cobalt-Catalyzed Photochemical CO2 Reduction/Results Co2+ experiments taken from SI
- Exchange Coupling Determines Metal-Dependent Efficiency for Iron- and Cobalt-Catalyzed Photochemical CO2 Reduction/CO2 Reduction under diverse conditions with diverse sensitizers
other