S

Santiago Álvarez

Northwestern University

ORCID: 0000-0002-4618-4189

Publishes on X-ray Diffraction in Crystallography, Magnetism in coordination complexes, Crystallization and Solubility Studies. 593 papers and 27k citations.

593Publications
27kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Covalent radii revisited
Beatriz Cordero, Verónica Gómez, Ana E. Platero‐Prats et al.|Dalton Transactions|2008
Cited by 4.1k

A new set of covalent atomic radii has been deduced from crystallographic data for most of the elements with atomic numbers up to 96. The proposed radii show a well behaved periodic dependence that allows us to interpolate a few radii for elements for which structural data is lacking, notably the noble gases. The proposed set of radii therefore fills most of the gaps and solves some inconsistencies in currently used covalent radii. The transition metal and lanthanide contractions as well as the differences in covalent atomic radii between low spin and high spin configurations in transition metals are illustrated by the proposed radii set.

A cartography of the van der Waals territories
Santiago Álvarez|Dalton Transactions|2013
Cited by 1.5kOpen Access

The distribution of distances from atoms of a particular element E to a probe atom X (oxygen in most cases), both bonded and intermolecular non-bonded contacts, has been analyzed. In general, the distribution is characterized by a maximum at short E···X distances corresponding to chemical bonds, followed by a range of unpopulated distances--the van der Waals gap--and a second maximum at longer distances--the van der Waals peak--superimposed on a random distribution function that roughly follows a d(3) dependence. The analysis of more than five million interatomic "non-bonded" distances has led to the proposal of a consistent set of van der Waals radii for most naturally occurring elements, and its applicability to other element pairs has been tested for a set of more than three million data, all of them compared to over one million bond distances.

The Rich Stereochemistry of Eight‐Vertex Polyhedra: A Continuous Shape Measures Study
David Casanova, Miquel Llunell, Pere Alemany et al.|Chemistry - A European Journal|2005
Cited by 953

A stereochemical study of polyhedral eight-vertex structures is presented, based on continuous shape measures (CShM). Reference polyhedra, shape maps, and minimal-distortion interconversion paths are presented for eight-vertex polyhedral and polygonal structures within the CShM framework. The application of these stereochemical tools is analyzed for several families of experimental structures: 1) coordination polyhedra of molecular transition-metal coordination compounds, classified by electron configuration and ligands; 2) edge-bonded polyhedra, including cubane structures, realgar, and metal clusters; 3) octanuclear transition-metal supramolecular architectures; and 4) coordination polyhedra in extended structures in inorganic solids. Structural classification is shown to be greatly facilitated by these tools, and the detection of less common structures, such as the gyrobifastigium, is straightforward.

Broken symmetry approach to calculation of exchange coupling constants for homobinuclear and heterobinuclear transition metal complexes
Eliseo Ruíz, Joan Cano, Santiago Álvarez et al.|Journal of Computational Chemistry|1999
Cited by 893

The application of broken symmetry density functional calculations to homobinuclear and heterobinuclear transition metal complexes produces good estimates of the exchange coupling constants as compared to experimental data. The accuracy of different hybrid density functional theory methods was tested. A discussion is presented of the different methodological approaches that apply when a broken symmetry wave function is used with either Hartree–Fock or density functional calculations. ©1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Comput Chem 20: 1391–1400, 1999