Lead(II) acetate trihydrate can be used as a reagent to synthesize lead-based coordination polymers by using isomeric phenylenediacetic acids. It can also be used as a precursor to synthesize lead sulfide nanoparticles.
Enveloped viruses hijack cellular membranes in order to provide the necessary material for virion assembly. In particular, viruses that replicate and assemble inside the nucleus have developed special approaches to modify the nuclear landscape for their advantage. We used electron
Carbon-13 CP/MAS NMR and crystallographic investigations of the structure and solid-state transformations of lead (II) acetate trihydrate.
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Lead acetate trihydrate precursor route to synthesize novel ultrafine lead oxide from spent lead acid battery pastes.
Sun X, et al.
Journal of Power Sources, 269, 565-576 (2014)
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Journal of Materials Chemistry, 16(40), 3952-3956 (2006)
Chemical communications (Cambridge, England), 50(92), 14436-14439 (2014-10-11)
5-Ethynyl-1,3-benzenedicarboxylic acid (H2ebdc) reacted with lead(II) acetate trihydrate yields a 1D ladder network, [Pb(ebdc)(MeOH)]2·H2O (1). Removing crystals of 1 from the mother liquor results in a facile single crystal to single crystal transition, yielding 2D [Pb(ebdc)] net (2) with a
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