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In 1962, the English-language edition was launched as Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English, which has a separate volume counting. With the beginning of Vol. 37 (1998) "in English" was dropped from the journal name. Several journals have merged into Angewandte Chemie, including Chemische Technik/Chemische Apparatur in 1947 and ...
Angewandte Chemie From an ISO 4 abbreviation : This is a redirect from an ISO 4 publication title abbreviation to the unabbreviated publication title, or an article containing information about the publication.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Angewandte_Chemie_International_Edition&oldid=29280524"
Angewandte Chemie, a peer-reviewed chemistry journal University of Applied Arts Vienna , a university of higher education in Austria Topics referred to by the same term
Anales de la Real Sociedad Española de Química; Anales de Química; Analyst (journal) Analytica Chimica Acta; Analytical Abstracts; Analytical Methods (journal) Angewandte Chemie; Annales d'histochimie; Annales de chimie et de physique; Annual Reports on the Progress of Chemistry; Annual Review of Analytical Chemistry; Applied Catalysis A ...
The journal was established in 1988 as a supplement to the general chemistry journal Angewandte Chemie and remained part of that journal for the first eighteen months of its existence. Founder and editor-in-chief was Peter Goelitz (then editor of Angewandte Chemie). [2] The current editors-in-chief are Irem Bayindir-Buchhalter and Esther Levy. [3]
The Zeitschrift für anorganische und allgemeine Chemie (Journal of Inorganic and General Chemistry) is a semimonthly peer-reviewed scientific journal covering inorganic chemistry, published by Wiley-VCH. The editors-in-chief are Thomas F. Fässler, Christian Limberg, Guodong Qian, and David Scheschkewitz. Originally the journal was published ...
In organic chemistry, the Arndt–Eistert reaction is the conversion of a carboxylic acid to its homologue.It is named for the German chemists Fritz Arndt (1885–1969) and Bernd Eistert (1902–1978).