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From the contents:
THEORY AND CONCEPTS IN CLUSTER CHEMISTRYHOMONUCLEAR CLUSTERS OF THE MAIN-GROUP ELEMENTS
- Introduction
- Alkali and Alkaline Metal Clusters and Alloys
- Boron Clusters
- Clusters of the Heavier Group 13 Elements
- Silicon Clusters
- Clusters of Germanium, Tin and Lead
- Clusters of Phosphorous, Arsenic, Antimony and Bismuth
- Clusters of Tellurium and Heavier Halogens
HETERONUCLEAR CLUSTERS OF THE MAIN-GROUP ELEMENTS
- Introduction
- Alkali Metal Suboxides and Subnitrides
- Carboranes and Heterocarboranes
- Heteropolyboranes with Group 15 and 16 Elements
- Heteropolyalanes, -gallanes, indanes and thallanes
- Clusters Growing Through Ionic Aggregation
APPLICATIONS OF CLUSTER COMPOUNDS OF THE MAIN-GROUP ELEMENTS
- Introduction
- Polyboranes in Cancer Therapy
- The Molecular Approach To Optoelectronic Materials with Group 13 and 15 Elements
- Silicon-Based Nanoscaled Particles, Thin Films and MaterialsTailoring Main-Group Element Clusters As Substrates in Catalysis Matthias Driess was born in 1961 in Eisenach, Thuringia. He received his chemistry diploma and Ph.D. degree from the University of Heidelberg under the supervision of Professor Walter Siebert and studied philosophy inspired by Professor Erhard Scheibe (Heidelberg) and Paul Feyerabend (ETH Zürich and Berkeley). After a one-year postdoctoral position with Professor Robert West in Madison, Wisconsin (U.S.A.), he returned to Heidelberg and finished his habilitation with the thesis entitled "silicon and phosphorus in unusual coordination" in 1993. After two more intellectually exciting years as lecturer at the Institutte of Inorganic Chemistry in Heidelberg, he was appointed as full professor of inorganic chemistry at the Ruhr-University Bochum in 1996. His research activities presently pursue two main directions: the synthesis of novel molecular functions based on compounds of the heavier main group elements and the conception of multiple-talented molecular single-source precursors for the synthesis of nanoscaled solids in catalysis and materials science. He received a generous fellowship of the "Fonds der Chemischen Indistrie" (1996), the Chemistry Award of the Academy of Science at the University of Göttingen (1997) and the "Otto-Klung-Award of Chemistry" of the Free University at Berlin (2000).
Heinrich Nöth is professor emeritus of inorganic chemistry at the University of Munich and President of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities. He studied chemistry at the University of Munich. After receiving his PhD degree he joined ICI Ltd. in Britain as a research officer. A year later he returned to Munich where he began his studies on electronprecise polyboranes. In 1966 he became a full professor at the University of Marburg. Three years later he succeeded his former academic teacher, Egon Wiberg, at the University of Munich where he retired in 1996. He is still active in the field of main group chemistry, with a strong emphasis on hydrides and particularly the chemistry of boron, and has made almost 800 publications to date.



