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catenation
[kat-n-ey-shuhn]
noun
the act or process of catenating.
Chemistry.the linking of identical atoms to form chainlike molecules.
Word History and Origins
Origin of catenation1
Example Sentences
Across the shoulder runs one word that Drake inscribed, with a sharpened stick or similar tool: “catination,” a variant of catenation, the state of being yoked or chained.
The ordinary places we think we know onshore are an altogether different matter seen — and heard — from the water, where the creatures with whom we share this place are cavorting in a spring catenation of life.
The authors took advantage of this fortuitous process to devise a protocol for making large, self-assembled polycatenanes by using a solution of toroids as ‘seeds’ for catenation.
The construction of larger systems is limited by the efficiency of the catenation step, in which a preassembled toroid precursor forms a ring that interlinks through another toroid; moreover, a large number of covalent bonds must be formed in the preassembled structure.
The authors found that addition of monomers in small portions favours the initiation of self-assembly processes that lead to catenation and were thus able to produce linear and branched polycatenanes containing up to 22 rings.
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