Volume 41 of Carbohydrate Chemistry demonstrates the interdisciplinary nature of modern carbohydrate research, and will be of great benefit to any researcher who wishes to learn about the latest developments in the carbohydrate field.
Volume 41 of Carbohydrate Chemistry demonstrates the interdisciplinary nature of modern carbohydrate research, and will be of great benefit to any researcher who wishes to learn about the latest developments in the carbohydrate field.
With the increase in volume, velocity and variety of information, researchers can find it difficult to keep up to date with the literature in the field. As the synthesis of novel carbohydrates and carbohydrate mimetics continues to be a major challenge for organic chemists, not least because of the increasingly interdisciplinary nature of carbohydrate science, Carbohydrate Chemistry Volume 41 will prove invaluable. Covering both chemical and biological science, this series collates modern carbohydrate research from theory to application and will be of great benefit to any researcher who wishes to learn about the latest developments in the carbohydrate field.
Dr Yves Queneau, Research Director at CNRS, is Head of the Organic and Bioorganic Chemistry Laboratory at INSA Lyon, Deputy-Director of the “Institut de Chimie et Biochimie Moléculaires et Supramoléculaires” (ICBMS), University of Lyon, France and Honorary Professor at the University of Hull, UK.After his doctorate on aqueous Diels-Alder reactions involving glycodienes under the supervision of Professor André Lubineau (Orsay, 1988) he was appointed as CNRS fellow and worked on cycloaddition reactions towards complex sugars. He then spent one year in 1992 in Professor Samuel J. Danishefsky’s group in Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, USA. He later moved to Lyon in a mixed CNRS-industrial research facility dedicated to sucrose chemistry (1995-2003) before joining its present position where he develops his research in organic and biological chemistry with a particular interest for the use of carbohydrates as renewable raw materials.
With the increase in volume, velocity and variety of information, researchers can find it difficult to keep up to date with the literature in the field. As the synthesis of novel carbohydrates and carbohydrate mimetics continues to be a major challenge for organic chemists, not least because of the increasingly interdisciplinary nature of carbohydrate science, Carbohydrate Chemistry Volume 41 will prove invaluable. Covering both chemical and biological science, this series collates modern carbohydrate research from theory to application and will be of great benefit to any researcher who wishes to learn about the latest developments in the carbohydrate field.
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