The Art of Chemistry (17)

The Art of Chemistry (17)

Author: Chemistry – A European Journal

As part of the celebrations for the 20th anniversary of Chemistry – A European Journal we would like to invite you to enter our cover quiz competition. Each week, for twenty weeks, we will post a multiple choice question based on one of the fabulous pieces of cover art that we have received over the past twenty years.

At the end of this competition, three entrants will be chosen at random to win a prize. The first prize will be either a subscription to Chemistry – A European Journal or the book Molecules of the World by K. C. Nicolaou and Tamsyn Montagnon, the second and third prizes will be a T-shirt.

Each article behind the cover graphic that we feature will be free to read until the end of the year.

Chemistry – A European Journal Cover Quiz

 

This question is closed, the answer has been published together with the next question in The Art of Chemistry (18).

Find all quizzes in ChemViews Magazine here.


Article behind the cover graphic

Chemistry - A European Journal Cover Quiz

Three-Dimensionally Arranged Windmill and Grid Porphyrin Arrays by AgI-Promoted mesomeso Block Oligomerization,
Aiko Nakano, Tomoko Yamazaki, Yoshinobu Nishimura, Iwao Yamazaki, Atsuhiro Osuka,
Chem. Eur. J. 2000, 6, 3254–3271.
DOI: 10.1002/1521-3765(20000901)6:17<3254::AID-CHEM3254>3.0.CO;2-6

 

Chemistry - A European Journal Cover Quiz

The answer to last week’s The Art of Chemistry (16) is:

Sears Tower (Willis Tower, 527 m)

At its planned height of 2,000 feet (610 m), the Chicago Spire also would have been taller than the One World Trade Center, which was completed in May 2013 and is currently the tallest freestanding building in the USA (546.2 m).

 

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