32nd International Conference on Solution Chemistry (ICSC-32), La Grande Motte, France, 28 August–2 September 2011
This conference is part of the Solution Chemistry series.
Preface
Modeling complex biological systems: From solution chemistry to membranes and channels
Interactions between charged surfaces mediated by molecules with spatially distributed charges
A first-principles theoretical study of hydrogen‑bond dynamics and vibrational spectral diffusion in aqueous ionic solution: Water in the hydration shell of a fluoride ion
Electrophoretic mobility of latex nanospheres in electrolytes: Experimental challenges
Hydrophobicity with atomic resolution: Steady‑state and ultrafast X-ray absorption and molecular dynamics studies
Dissolution measurement free from mass transport
Possible routes for pyrochemical separation: Focus on the reductive extraction in fluoride media
Organic chemistry under hydrothermal conditions
Friedman’s excess free energy and the McMillan–Mayer theory of solutions: Thermodynamics
Fluids in random porous media: Scaled particle theory
Formation of supramolecular structures in organic solvents
Molecular models of natural organic matter and its colloidal aggregation in aqueous solutions: Challenges and opportunities for computer simulations
Multiscale modeling of solvation in chemical and biological nanosystems and in nanoporous materials
Extended excluded volume: Its origin and consequences
Adsorption of gold(III) on ionic imprinted amino‑silica hybrid prepared from rice hull ash
Complexes of sulfuric acid with N,N‑dimethylformamide: An ab initio investigation
Lanthanoids(III) and actinoids(III) in water: Diffusion coefficients and hydration enthalpies from polarizable molecular dynamics simulations
Cellular automata approach to corrosion and passivity phenomena
Solutions are solutions, and gels are almost solutions
Peculiarities of phase diagrams of reactive liquid–liquid systems
Thermal behavior, structure, and dynamics of low-temperature water confined in mesoporous organosilica by differential scanning calorimetry, X-ray diffraction, and quasi-elastic neutron scattering