Chemical Reviews  
150 px
Abbreviated title (ISO 4) Chem. Rev.
Discipline Chemistry
Language English
Edited by Josef Michl
Publication details
Publisher American Chemical Society ( USA)
Publication history 1924 to present
Impact factor
(2010)
33.033
Indexing
ISSN 0009-2665 (print)
1520-6890 (web)
CODEN chreay
Links

Chemical Reviews (usually abbreviated as Chem. Rev.), is a peer-reviewed scientific journal, published since 1924 by the American Chemical Society. As the name indicates, it publishes comprehensive, critical reviews of an area rather than original research. Publication is currently monthly with a combination of thematic issues, where one area is reviewed in several related articles, and mixed issues. The impact factor in 2010 of this journal is 33.033[1]

Chemical Reviews is currently indexed in Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS), British Library, CABI, EBSCOhost, Proquest, PubMed, SCOPUS, SwetsWise, and Web of Science.

References [link]

  1. ^ Journal Citation Reports, 2010

https://wn.com/Chemical_Reviews

Rev

Rev or Rév may refer to:

People

  • Rev I of Funk, a king of (Caucasian) Iberia (i.e., eastern Georgia)
  • Rev II of Iberia, a prince who functioned as a co-king to his father Mirian III, the first Christian Georgian ruler
  • Rev Cannady (1904-unknown), a baseball player in the Negro Leagues
  • Music

  • Rev (Perry Farrell album), a 1999 album
  • Rev.elation (album)
  • Rev It Up, an album by American hard rock band Vixen
  • Rev-Ola Records, a UK record label formed in 1988
  • Rev (Ten Foot Pole album)
  • Rev Theory, an American hard rock band based out of New York
  • Rev (Ultra Vivid Scene album)
  • Alpha rev, a rock band from Austin, Texas
  • Lívia Rév (born 1916), a classical concert pianist
  • Martin Rev, an instrumentalist from New York punk-era electronic band Suicide
  • Mercury Rev, an American rock music group
  • The Rev, former drummer and back-up vocalist for the band Avenged Sevenfold
  • Other uses

  • Rev (HIV), an HIV gene
  • Rev. (TV series), a BBC sitcom (2010–2014) about an inner-city priest
  • Rev.com, a marketplace for freelancers that offers two services: audio transcription and document translation.
  • Rev (album)

    Rev is an album by Jane's Addiction vocalist Perry Farrell, released in 1999. It is a combination of solo work and a best-of for the singer's bands.

    Background

    To fulfill requirements on a contract with Warner Bros. Records, this album was produced with a combination of solo, Jane's Addiction, and Porno for Pyros recordings. Originally, the solo tracks were intended for a side project called "Golabee". The title track features Tom Morello and John Frusciante on guitars. Farrell signed with Virgin Records shortly after Rev's release.

    Track listing

  • "Rev"
  • "Whole Lotta Love"
  • "Been Caught Stealing" [12" Remix Version]
  • "Jane Says"
  • "Stop" (Edit)
  • "Mountain Song"
  • "Summertime Rolls"
  • "Kimberly Austin"
  • "Tonight"
  • "Tahitian Moon"
  • "Pets"
  • "Cursed Male"
  • "100 Ways"
  • "Hard Charger" (Edit)
  • "Ripple"
  • "Satellite of Love"
  • Promo

  • "Rev"
  • "Been Caught Stealing" [12" Remix Version]
  • "Kimberly Austin"
  • "Satellite of Love"
  • References

    Rev. (TV series)

    Rev. is a British television sitcom produced by Big Talk Productions. The show premiered on BBC Two on 28 June 2010 and ended on 28 April 2014. The show's working titles were The City Vicar and Handle With Prayer. The series revolves around a Church of England priest, played by Tom Hollander, who becomes the vicar of an inner-city London church after leaving a small rural Suffolk parish.

    Hollander said: "[w]e wanted to define ourselves in opposition to the cliché of a country vicar, partly because we wanted to depict England as it is now, rather than having a sort of bucolic-y, over the hills and far away, bird-tweeting England – we wanted the complications of the multi-cultural, multi-ethnic inner-city, where everything is much harder."

    Plot

    The Reverend Adam Smallbone is an Anglican priest who has recently moved from a small rural parish to the "socially disunited" St Saviour in the Marshes in Hackney, East London. Unable to turn anyone away from his pastoral care, Smallbone is faced with a collection of moral challenges as he balances the needs of genuine believers, people on the streets, and drug addicts, as well as the demands of social climbers using the church to get their children into the best schools.

    Podcasts:

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