5 books found
by Adrian John Pieters, Benjamin Ralph Stauber, Chalmers Jackson King, Charles Walter Collins, Fred Earl Keating, George Wright Hoffman, Hazel Katherine Stiebeling, Mary E. Sweeny, Robert Claude Wright, Walter Cochran Davis, Charlotte Chatfield, Harold Frederick Loomis, John Valentine Schaffner, Ruth Leah Morgan, Thomas Moore Whiteman
1931
by George S. Zweifel, Michael H. Nantz, Peter Somfai
2017 · John Wiley & Sons
This book bridges the gap between sophomore and advanced / graduate level organic chemistry courses, providing students with a necessary background to begin research in either an industry or academic environment. • Covers key concepts that include retrosynthesis, conformational analysis, and functional group transformations as well as presents the latest developments in organometallic chemistry and C–C bond formation • Uses a concise and easy-to-read style, with many illustrated examples • Updates material, examples, and references from the first edition • Adds coverage of organocatalysts and organometallic reagents
by United States. Bureau of Standards, Bruce Lee Wilson, Joseph Raymond Kanagy, Raymond Laraway Sanford, Douglas Roy Tate, George Borkowski
1944
Drug resistance is increasing among a variety of human pathogenic microorganisms such as Enterococcus faecium, Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Acinetobacter baumaniii, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Enterobacter spp. (currently dubbed the 'ESKAPE' pathogens), and has emerged as one of the most important clinical challenges of this century. Increased general awareness and fear of these pathogens means there is a growing demand for research to tackle the threat of multidrug resistance. Documenting the latest research in the field, this book discusses current and promising activities to discover new antimicrobials in five key areas: molecular genetics and systems microbiology; synthetic, computational chemistry and chemoinformatics; High Throughput Screening (HTS); non-vertebrate model hosts; and light- and nano-based technologies.