Difference between revisions 6001568 and 6001569 on simplewiki

{{chembox
| ImageFileL1 = Ferrocene-2D.png
| ImageSizeL1 = 80 px
| ImageFileR1 = Ferrocene-from-xtal-3D-balls.png
| ImageSizeR1 = 120 px
| ImageFile2 = Photo of Ferrocene (powdered).JPG
| ImageSize2 = 220 px
| ImageName2 = Powdered Ferrocene
(contracted; show full)
 | journal = Angewandte Chemie International Edition
 | year = 2000
 | volume = 39
 | pages = 123–124
 | doi = 10.1002/(SICI)1521-3773(20000103)39:1<123::AID-ANIE123>3.0.CO;2-Z}}</ref> Its distinctive "sandwich" structure led to an explosion of interest in compounds of [[d-block]] metals with hydrocarbons, and invigorated the development of the flourishing study of organometallic chemistry.  In 1973 [[Ernst Otto Fischer|Fischer]] of the [[
Ludwig-Maximilians-Technische Universität München]] and [[Geoffrey Wilkinson|Wilkinson]] of [[Imperial College London]] shared a Nobel Prize  with for their work on metallocenes and other aspects of organometalic chemistry.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1973/press.html |title= Press Release: The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1973 |year= 1973 |publisher= The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences}}</ref>

==Structure and bonding==
(contracted; show full)[[pl:Ferrocen]]
[[ru:Ферроцен]]
[[fi:Ferroseeni]]
[[sv:Ferrocen]]
[[th:เฟอร์โรซีน]]
[[tr:Ferrosen]]
[[ur:Ferrocene]]
[[zh:二茂铁]]