Our Group organises 3000+ Global Conferenceseries Events every year across USA, Europe & Asia with support from 1000 more scientific Societies and Publishes 700+ Open Access Journals which contains over 50000 eminent personalities, reputed scientists as editorial board members.
The existence, reactions, structures and properties of compounds occurring in nature, and their synthetic analogues are explainable
by the idea of two-center two-electron bond. These families contain either electron exact or electron rich building blocks from
the viewpoint of electron structure. Electron deficient building blocks have never been found in nature, and exist only in synthetic
species. Boron cluster compounds (BCCs) create the most intensely investigated family of species with electron deficient cluster. Their
existence has been explained by the accumulation of unique electron deficient bonds, which bind together three boron atoms or,
sometimes, their substitutes, in clusters. Pronouncedly electron deficient clusters either determine or substantially affect properties of
BCCs, and their prospects. Therapeutical prospects attract the highest attention now, and many compounds with boron clusters are
synthesized as candidates for therapeutical uses. These compounds must pass through mandatory studies and checks, which require
variety of chemical analyses, identically with other compounds. However, analytical methods do not exist for analyses of compounds
with boron clusters. The pieces of knowledge from chiral separation of BCCs prove the dissimilarity of some analytical properties
of species with and without boron clusters, and indicate the absence of criteria for the a priori estimation of different analytical
properties for compounds with and without clusters. Thus, missing analytical methods cannot be derived from existing knowledge.
Analytical research of BCCs motivated by their medical prospects is the best way to preventive elimination some obstacles, which
may hamper medical uses of compounds with boron clusters.
Biography
Radim Vespalec has received equivalent to PhD from the Institute of Physical Chemistry, Academy of Sciences of the Czechoslovak Republic, Praha, in 27. He received the scientific degree from Technical University of Pardubice, and the pedagogical Assoc. Prof. Degree from Masaryk University Brno. He is Senior Scientist in the Institute of Biophysics. Web of Science reports his 80 scientific articles and also he has contributed to 3 monographs.