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Inorganic chemistry. Please take a moment to review
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I am trying to think of ways to organize this article without reinventing what has been done and trying to avoid my (or any editor's) biases. One idea, which I applied to
agricultural chemistry, is to apply the scope of the field as defined by an authoritative journal. For Agricultural Chemistry, I relied on the
American Chem Society's
Journal of Agricultural Chemistry's statement of scope.
Below, I list excerpts from the
Royal Society of Chemistry's journal and the corresponding ACS journal
inorganic chemistry, which encompasses the organometallic, bioinorganic and materials chemistry of the elements, with applications including synthesis, catalysis, energy conversion/storage, electrical devices and medicine. ...areas of our scope is given below.
Solid-state inorganic materials (including nanomaterials). solid-state, materials and nano-chemistry ... synthesis, characterisation, and applications of new inorganic or inorganic-organic hybrid solids, together with studies of their properties.
Catalysis ...This would include catalyst design and synthesis, structure-activity relationships and/or mechanistic studies.
Bioinorganic and medicinal inorganic chemistry...model compounds of metalloenzymes and biologically active inorganic compounds ... the sensing and visualization of biorelevant metal ions.
Theoretical and computational studies...models of reactivity, selectivity, bonding or structure, or new computational methods.
Analytical/separation studies and sensor development ... provided there is significant insight into the chemistry of the inorganic component.
notice no explicit mention of coordination or main group chemistry or industrial.
Inorganic Chemistry. Aims & Scope:
Coordination and Organometallic Chemistry
Bioinorganic Chemistry
Solid State, Materials, and Nanoscale Chemistry
Energy and Photochemistry
Catalysis
Theory and Computation
notice no explicit mention of main group chemistry.