Also known as J.P. Sauvage, J.-P. Sauvage, J P Sauvage, J. P. Sauvage
French nanotechnologist
Jean-Pierre Sauvage is a French scientist who works in nanotechnology, the field of building and manipulating extremely tiny structures at the molecular level. His work in this area has contributed to advances in creating miniature machines and devices that could have applications in medicine, electronics, and other fields.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
<a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Jean-Pierre+Sauvage">Read more on Last.fm</a>
5 total works indexed
· 2012 · cited 65,134x
· 2015 · cited 32,540x
· 1991 · cited 29,953x
· 2004 · cited 27,788x
Crystal structure of a catenane reported by Sauvage and coworkers in the Chem. Commun., 1985, 244–247. Crystal structure of a molecular trefoil knot with two copper(I) templating ions bound within it reported by Sauvage and coworkers in Recl. Trav. Chim. Pay. B., 1993, 427–428. Jean-Pierre Sauvage ( French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃pjɛʁ sovaʒ]; born 21 October 1944) is a French coordination chemist working at Strasbourg University. He graduated from the National School of Chemistry of Strasbourg (now known as ECPM Strasbourg), in 1967. He has specialized in supramolecular chemistry for which he has been awarded the 2016 Nobel Prize in Chemistry along with Sir J. Fraser Stoddart and Bernard L. Feringa.
Biography
· 2016 · cited 22,931x
via Crossref · CC0
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).