https://www.selleckchem.com/products/2-deoxy-d-glucose.html This review aims to not only highlight and describe the tremendous efforts towards the development of improved catalysts for well-known chemical recycling processes, but also identify new promising methods for catalytic recycling or upcycling of the most abundant commercial polymers.Ytterbium-doped lead halide perovskite (Yb3+CsPbX3 with x = Cl or Cl/Br) nanocrystals and thin films have shown surprisingly efficient downconversion by quantum cutting with PLQYs up to 193%. After excitation of the perovskite host with high-energy photons, the excited states of two Yb ions are rapidly populated, subsequently emitting lower-energy photons. Several synthesis routes lead to highly efficient materials, and we review the progress on both the synthesis, material quality and applicability of these downconversion layers. For solar cells they could be used to increase the power converted from high-energy photons, and first applications have already shown an increase in the power conversion efficiency of silicon and CIGS solar cells. Applications such as luminescent solar concentrators an LEDs are also explored. With further research to overcome challenges regarding power saturation and stability, this material has great potential for a simple route to enhance solar cells.Fluorescent probes for the detection of intracellular nitric oxide (NO) are abundant, but those targeted to the mitochondria are scarce. Among those molecules targeting mitochondrial NO (mNO), the majority use a triphenylphosphonium (TPP) cation as a vector to reach such organelles. Here we describe a simple molecule (mtNOpy) based on the pyrylium structure, made in a few synthetic steps, capable of detecting selectively NO (aerated medium) over other reactive species. The calculated detection limit for mtNOpy is 88 nM. The main novelty of this probe is that it has a simple molecular architecture and can act both as a fluorogenic and as a mitochondriotr