-
metal dichalcogenides. One
famous intercalation host is graphite,
which intercalates pot****ium as a guest.
Intercalation expands the van der
Waals gap between...
- Look up
intercalation in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Intercalation may
refer to:
Intercalation (chemistry),
insertion of a
molecule (or ion) into...
- The 1906
Intercalated Games or 1906
Olympic Games (Gr****: Μεσολυμπιάδα, romanized: Mesolympiada, lit. 'Mesolympics'), held from 22
April 1906 to 2 May...
-
terpyridine whose planar structure is
ideal for
intercalation. Base
pairs in DNA must
separate to
admit the
intercalator. The
separation is
achieved by unwinding...
-
bases at the site of
intercalation remain unbroken. In
addition to π-stacking
between the
aromatic regions of the
intercalator and the
nitrogenous bases...
- when to
intercalate the
Jewish calendar.[full
citation needed] Some
sources say that the
Arabs followed the
Jewish practice and
intercalated seven months...
- Look up
intercalation or
embolism in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Intercalation or
embolism in
timekeeping is the
insertion of a leap day, w****, or...
-
enzymes called topoisomerases.[1]
Using a
topoisomerase along with an
intercalator,
topoisomers with
different linking number may be
separated on an agarose...
-
Intercalated discs or
lines of
Eberth are
microscopic identifying features of
cardiac muscle.
Cardiac muscle consists of
individual heart muscle cells...
-
everything into
rough alignment with the
solar year by some
system of
intercalation. This is a
typical element of
lunisolar calendars and was necessary...