Author Topic: Professional Chemistry Links  (Read 34871 times)

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LaBTop

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Professional Chemistry Links
« on: March 31, 2001, 05:33:00 PM »
MORE LINKS about CHEMISTRY.
Additional Professional Chemical Lists:



THIS is a BEAUTY!

http://tellurium.chem.ox.ac.uk/Ketones/Default.html


http://tellurium.chem.ox.ac.uk/Ketones/Index.html


Synthesis of Ketones (an interactive tutorial on the Claisen reaction and
synthesis of ketones from beta-ketoesters.)
I got 11 wrong answers in the 9 parts of the 3 hour online tutorial, mainly because some maniac was constantly talking to me. Junks are a menace.
This tutorial requires the Flash 4 plug-in:

http://www.macromedia.com/shockwave/download/index.cgi?P1_Prod_Version=ShockwaveFlash


To go through the whole tutorial should take a total of a couple of hours after which you should understand the following topics:
-- Using beta-ketoacids in the synthesis of ketones.
-- Mechanism of the Claisen reaction, the reversibility of the Claisen reaction and the choice of base.
-- The Dieckmann condensation and the position of equilibrium in the condensation.
-- The reverse Claisen, which can be used to give acids.
-- The easy decarboxylation of beta-ketoacids.
-- Retrosynthesis applied to ketones which are synthesised from beta-ketoacids.


This above link comes from another BEAUTY:

http://neon.chem.ox.ac.uk/vrchemistry/


Virtual Chemistry, the Virtual Laboratory.
You can click on the experiments to launch interactive teaching practicals.
I advise to download MDL's FREE chemical structure visualization plug-in for Windows and Macintosh, to be able to enjoy the full experience of all the links on this page:

http://www.mdlchime.com/chime/

  CHIME.
And then (you already downloaded Flash 4 plug-in? See above) you should
click the Pre-University Chemistry Course link. And then the rest of ALL the links.
Keeps you busy for a few days, but it is worth it!


http://modelscience.com/software.html


Model ChemLab Vers.2.0 Evaluation version.(1.8 MB) Plus free Periodic Table application.


http://www.claessen.net/chemistry/


One of the top 5% Chemistry sites. Hoover over "Site Navigation" in top right.


http://www.chemie.de/HyperNews/get/forums/chemstarter.html


ChemStarter is a well visited online discussion forum. Everybody interested in chemistry from highschools to companies and universities give an interesting broad range of opinions and background. Main discussion language is English but also German is common.
This is a good replacement for "the HIVE", when it is down !!


For Lilienthals birthday:

http://www.chami.com/html-kit/


There's nothing more to say than:
HAVE A LOOK at the FEATURES halfway down!
And then this EXCELLENT site (for OstFriesen ;) ):

http://spot.fho-emden.de/links.htm


http://spot.fho-emden.de/ftp.htm


http://spot.fho-emden.de/chemie/chemie.htm


Hundreds of Chemistry links. Very GOOD!

http://spot.fho-emden.de/ftp/chemie.htm


SPOT software archive. Look also for the rest to the left!
Take a look at the "LABORANT" software:

http://spot.fho-emden.de/ftp/chemie/laborant.zip


Laborant Chemstation for Windows (LCS)(english version)
LCS is a chemistry and data analysis program. LCS isn't a chemistry
education program. It's a program for your daily laboratory work.
LCS supports an enormous range of chemical, numerical und statistical
functions. I believe, you´ve never seen such a comprehensive chemistry
program as FREEWARE. (He's not exagerating!)
And there is MUCH more to download.
Don't forget to click on the NASA Mars Mirror.


For KrZ's birthday:

http://www.chemspeed.com/asw2000p.html


The Chemspeed automated Synthesis Workstation ASW2000P.
- the first unattended, fully automated synthesizer for reactions under pressure.
SUPPORT:
It is highly important to us that you feel absolutely comfortable with your new Chemspeed synthesizer in order to achieve a maximum productivity.
Our Support Department will help you to use your new Chemspeed instrumentation in the most efficient way. Our services include:
Coaching on the system
Detailed training is included with the purchase of our systems. Our experienced support chemists will coach you on your system. At the conclusion of the training, you will be able to directly program your chemistry applications and to run them efficiently.
Lease a chemist
As an additional service we offer to "rent " one of or highly trained support chemist for a limited time to you, supporting you in transferring classical chemistry to parallel synthesis. He will program and subsequently run your entire multi parallel chemical reactions on your Chemspeed synthesizer.
Excellence in after sales support
We will assist you, by phone or if necessary in house, as soon you need our help or advice in all technical and application related matters. We provide worldwide support of all our systems within 24 hours of your call.
And a copy of Uncle Festers Secrets of Methamphetamine Manufacture, 5th Edition.


http://www.levity.com/alchemy/islam.html


Islamic Alchemy. Collection of some of the Egyptian and Muslim achievements in science in Old Egyptian Ages and Muslim ages of Medievel times.
This will teach our AmeriKKKlans some valuable lessons, I hope.


http://www.buchi.com/


Click Our Skills/Training !
BASICS of DISTILLATION:

http://www.buchi.com/cgi-win/buchi4.exe?todo=appcheck&trai=BASICDEN.PDF


Remember the first time you ever boiled water? You will certainly have noticed how the steam formed running droplets, i.e. condensed, on nearby surfaces. This was your first distillation. In the following report you will learn how to carry out distillations more scientific.
DETERMINATION of MELTING and BOILING POINTS:

http://www.buchi.com/cgi-win/buchi4.exe?todo=appcheck&trai=Meltinen.pdf


Every substance has its own physical characteristics such as melting point and boiling point. The determination of the melting point is a simple and fast method which indicates roughly the purity of the substance.
DISTILLATION and ENVIRONMENT:

http://www.buchi.com/cgi-win/buchi4.exe?todo=appcheck&trai=ENVIROEN.PDF


World-wide around 200,000 rotary evaporators and just as many static glass systems are in use. Taking a distillate loss rate of 10%, this adds up to an immense amount of 160,000 litres of solvent polluting the laboratory air and the environment every day. What are the reasons of these solvent losses?
DISTILLATION with ROTARY EVAPORATORS:

http://www.buchi.com/cgi-win/buchi4.exe?todo=appcheck&trai=ROTARYEN.PDF


A rotary evaporator is a specially designed instrument for the evaporation of solvent (single-stage or straight distillation) under vacuum. The evaporator consists of a heating bath with a rotating flask, where the liquid is distributed as a thin film over the hot glass surface and evaporates easily.
PERIPHERY/VACUUM GENERATION and REGULATION:

http://www.buchi.com/cgi-win/buchi4.exe?todo=appcheck&trai=VACUUMEN.PDF


Are you working with a rotary evaporator? Vacuum generation and vacuum control would optimize the operation mode. How are these instruments used?
SAFETY AGAINST EXPLOSION ACCIDENTS:

http://www.buchi.com/cgi-win/buchi4.exe?todo=appcheck&trai=EXPLOSEN.PDF


When working with combustible materials, the presence of an ignition source entails the danger of an explosion. Its effect is uncontrollable, it might endanger people and destroy material values. Electric appliances and tools used in dangerous areas, are potential sources of ignition. It is important to take measures against the risk of ignition.
THERE ARE a few more TRAINING FILES there.
BTW, this is a real ROTARY EVAPORATOR:





Distil up to 20 litres of solvent efficiently and gently.
The new Büchi Rotavapor® R-220 is designed for rapid, efficient evaporation of sample volumes up to 20 litres. Its broad temperature range from +20° C to +180° C opens up a wide range of applications and ist modular design makes it possible to fully adapt the Rotavapor® to your individual needs. Its superior cost-to-benefit ratio also makes the R-220 a most attractive economic investment.
This is the "small" one:





ROTAVAPOR R-205 PROFESSIONAL
The top model, which has a display module for vapour temperature and the rotation speed of the flask plus integral Vacuum Controller V-805.


http://www.chemie.fu-berlin.de/cgi-bin/abbscomp


Abbrevations of chemical compounds. If you know an abbrevation like THF or DMSO and want to find the chemical compound then have a look here.


http://www.ch.cam.ac.uk/ChemSitesIndex.html


Two thousand of the best chemistry sites. All of these sites are checked every month.
The biggest list of University Chemistry Departments all over the world.
Journals, Learned Societies, Online Chemistry Clubs.

http://www.liv.ac.uk/Chemistry/Links/international.html


Information about University Chemistry Departments listed by country

http://www-chemistry.sci.kun.nl/chemistry/dutch_chemistry_facs.html


Overview of Chemistry Departments of Dutch Universities

http://www.chemie.de/~knecht/englisch/unieng.php3


Universities World Wide.


http://www.1cm.com

  1st Chemical Market.
Offers marketers, producers, traders and distributors a focal point for buying and selling chemicals on a global scale. Through its real-time and interactive character, the 1st Chemical Market provides decision makers with real-time information on prices, product offers and inquiries.


http://www.wco.com/~ejia

  ABCentral.
Over 10.000 links concerning courses, tutorials and training.


http://schmidel.com/bionet.htm

  BioChemNet.
Directory of biology and chemistry resources.


http://mili.unice.fr/html/cdiec/

  Centre Documentaire Informatique
Enseignement Chimie.
Collection of chemical links.


http://www.liv.ac.uk/Chemistry/Links/international.html


International University Chemistry Departments.
Information about University Chemistry Departments listed by country.


http://www.labcontrol.com/viewp.htm


SPECTACLE View Point is LabControl's new free viewer software for any
spectroscopic data and chemical structures running under Win 95/98
and NT(Intel). Perfect as external viewer for Web browsers.


http://www.davincipress.com/


DaVinci Press Ink. A biotechnology-related page with links to all the
major biotechnology companies and biotechnology software companies.


http://www.mathe2.uni-bayreuth.de/molgen4/


MOLGEN 4.0 This program system is devoted to the computation of all
structural formulae (=connectivity isomers) that correspond to a given
molecular formula, with (optional) further conditions (e.g. substructures).
MOLGEN arose from the idea to provide an efficient and portable tool for
molecular structure elucidation in both chemical industry, research and education.


http://www.ijc.com/

  Internet Journal of Chemistry.
A pure all-electronic journal which is peer reviewed. All articles in fulltext readable.


http://www.chemistry.co.nz/

  Chemistry Solutions.
Comprehensive science and chemistry resource site compiled for students
at advanced secondary level. An excellent starting point for both students
and their teachers. 


http://www.galactic.com/galactic/_gala/data.htm


Galactic Industries Corp. An on-line searchable database of
IR, H1 NMR, C13 NMR and MS spectra. Search by name, CAS number,
molecular formula. View spectra as GIFs online or download spectral
data files for viewing locally with free Win95/NT viewer.
Win3.x and Mac viewers also avaliable


http://www.www.sg-p.com/


Scientific Glass & Plastic. Custom fabrication and repair of
scientific glassware - pyrex and quartz.


http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Hangar/9825


Modern Alchemist. A website for high school students with an emphasis on developing problem solving skills. Students are introduced to calculus and spreadsheets as tools for solving chemistry problems.


http://www.gwu.edu/~mpb/


Metabolic Pathways of Biochemistry graphical representation of major metabolic pathways important to human metabolism All mechanisms are available as 2D and 3D pictures.


http://www.aist.go.jp/RIODB/SDBS/sdbs/owa/sdbs_sea.cre_frame_sea


SDBS Integrated Spectral Data Base System for Organic Compounds.
Available are IR, Raman, NMR and MS spectra.


http://www.pingweb.de/larissa


Java Paradise. Some Java applets and programs for chemistry.


http://www.argonide.com/

  Argonide.
Provides energetic metastable nanosize powders of many metals.


http://mineral.galleries.com/

  For FMan!
Mineral collection of Amethyst Galleries.
Very detailed mineral archive. It offers several opportunities to search:
By mineral names, kind of minerals or by full text. Every mineral is presented with a photo, detailed description and many physical data.


http://huckel.cm.utexas.edu/mpegtable.html


ESG's The MPEG Periodic Table MPEG-videos of important and
fundamental reactions of each element.


http://www.chemconnect.com/library/journals.shtml


ChemConnect: Chemistry Journals Online List of over 300 chemistry journals.

 

http://www.acdlabs.com/ilab/


ACD/ILAB. Offers the following database searches and property predictions such as IUPAC name generation, CAS name generation, HNMR spectrum prediction, 13C-NMR spectrum prediction, pKa database search (over 9000 structures), pKa prediction, LogP prediction, LogD prediction, Boiling point prediction, Vapor pressure prediction, Enthalpy of vaporization prediction, Aqueous solubility prediction, Bioconcentration factor prediction and Adsorption coefficient prediction.
This service is not free of charge, but a free demoversion is available.


http://hydrogen.cchem.berkeley.edu:8080/Smells/
Berkeley Smells Database Choose a compound from an index or use the search
engine to find it. For each compound you find a description of its smell,
the IUPAC name and the synonym as well as some physical data.
Besides you get information about the natural occurrence of each
compound (e.g. in cherries, peaches etc.).


http://chemfinder.camsoft.com/


ChemFinder Searching Searches for elements and compounds.
Very detailed information on chemical and physical properties.
A 2D structure of each compound is shown if the web browser's
configuration is correct.


http://info.cas.org/welcome.html


Chemical Abstracts Service. (CAS)


http://casweb.cas.org/chempatplus/


Chemical Patents Plus Offers the full text for all classes of patents issued by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office from 1975 to the present, including partial coverage from 1971-1974. Complete patent page images are available for patents issued from 1 January 1994.


http://schiele.organik.uni-erlangen.de/services/webmol.html


Chemical Structure Database The WWW chemical structures database contains
more than 2250 automatically collected chemical structures from the Internet, complete with information about the referring HTML pages. This database is searchable with the usual chemical search operations - full-structure and substructure search, formula search, name search, and more.


http://chirbase.u-3mrs.fr/


A MOLECULAR DATABASE FOR CHIRAL CHROMATOGRAPHY.
A powerful Information System for Chiral Separations of Enantiomers by Chromatography.
CHIRBASE is a molecular database which contains :
 80,000 chiral separations.
 21,000 molecular structures.
 4,000 new separations updated every four months.
 A multitude of unpublished Data.
 Three types of format : ISIS/Base/Local, ISIS/Host and REACCS.
A unique tool for preparative or analytical resolution of drugs, agrochemicals, etc ...


http://www.colby.edu/chemistry/cmp/cmp.html


Organic Compounds Database Organic compounds can be searched by melting point, boiling point, refraction, formula, functional groups and
characteristic peaks of UV or MS spectra.


http://www.labtops.de/en/indexen.htm


LabTops Association of German and Swiss manufacturers of laboratory products.


http://pubs.acs.org/lg/96/ac/lgpage.html


LabGuide Directory List of all manufacturers of laboratory instruments an their products.
You can search for manufacturers and products or you can select them from an alphabetical index. If a manufacturer is represented in the internet, its internet and e-mail address are published besides the postal address.


http://www.chemcenter.org/

  ChemCenter.
Information center of the American Chemical Society (ACS). Available
are several databases and journals, but for some of them a fee must be
payed. Besides a list of ACS conferences and a shopping mall are offered.


http://www.shef.ac.uk/~chem/chemdex/

  ChemDex.
A list of many internet resources concerning chemistry.


http://www.retallick.com/resources/

  Chemical Engineering Online Resources.
Offers links to valuable resources for the chemical engineering and scientific research communities. Also included are two separate sections listing Internet and World Wide Web sites of greatest interest to chemical engineers, and a section for ChE students.


http://chemistry.miningco.com

  Chemistry - from The Mining Company.
Weekly, original articles and supplementary and archived features.
Topics include: the environment, biochemistry, and inorganic, organic,
and medicinal chemistry.


http://www3.hanyang.ac.kr/~chem/Link/chem_link_korea.html

  Chemistry Link Korea.
Collection of chemistry links especially for korean institutions.


http://www.chemistry.co.nz/

  Chemistry Solutions.
Comprehensive science and chemistry resource site compiled for students at advanced secondary level. An excellent starting point for both students and their teachers.


http://library.advanced.org/3659/

  CHEMystery.
Interactive resource for learning chemistry on the web. It combines clear and concise text with many interactive components, such as 3-D VRML for illustrating atomic structures. Use the CHEMystery Meeting Forum.


http://ChemWeb.com

  ChemWeb.
There is a full text searchable library of core chemical journals and databases, a Shopping Mall (containing hundreds of products, services, and publications which you can purchase online), a Job Exchange, and a Conference Diary.
In addition you can find ChemDex-plus - your jump station to the best chemistry sites on the web, and The Alchemist, ChemWeb.com's Webzine with the latest scientific news, research, software and book reviews, personal views of famous Chemists and Sites of the Week. Membership is required and is free.


http://schools.sys.uea.ac.uk/schoolnet/winchester/chemistry.html

  Chemistry
in Education Links.
Links for chemistry teachers.


http://www.cheminform.de/Homeeng.htm

  CID Chemie-Informationsdienst.
Many useful links about chemistry. Links to chemical industry, product
databases, newsgroups and the latest news about chemistry.


http://www.clearinghouse.net/cgi-bin/chadmin/viewcat/Science___Mathematics?kywd++

 
Clearinghouse:Section Science.
List of links index for all kinds of science. Only sites reviewed by Clearinghouse are listed.


http://www.davincipress.com

  DaVinci Press Ink.
A biotechnology-related page with links to all the major biotechnology
companies and biotechnology software companies.


http://ecology.miningco.com

  Ecology from the Mining Company.
The site has weekly articles about ecology, reviewed links to hundreds
of the best sites in ecology and environmental science, a bulletin board,
newsletter and much more.


http://electrochem.cwru.edu/estir/

  Electrochemical Science
and Technolgy Information Resource (ESTIR).
General information about electrochemistry. Internet links. Software,
bibliographies. Societies. Journals. Handbooks. Books. Review chapters.
Graduate schools. Popular science information. Meetings. Nomenclature.


http://oak.cc.conncoll.edu/~mzim/

  General Chemistry.
This web-site was written to give introductory chemistry students an idea of what chemistry is all about. Why would anyone want to take chemistry or
become a chemist? What type of jobs are there for chemists and what type
of salaries are they being paid? The site also has links to sites that
present strange/interesting/humorous chemistry facts.


http://www.chemie.fu-berlin.de/chemistry/index/

  Internet Chemistry Index.
More links about chemistry.


http://www.info-systems.com/

  ISIS Information System for scientists.
Detailed collection of scientific links. Available in German, English and French.


http://fluo.univ-lemans.fr:8001/chimie/chimistes.html  ISI's 10858 Most Cited Chemists.
List of the most cited chemists which can also be searched using the

http://pcb4122.univ-lemans.fr/cgi-bin/perl.exe?chimistes.pl


search engine.


http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Lab/5875/

  Paul's Chemistry Lab.
A chemistry information center with interactive information and
tutorials for all levels of chemists.


http://www4.chemieserver.de/bda/nat/chemie/uk-index.html

  PZ InterneT Chemieserver.
Database with chemical links and utilities for chemists.


http://www.geocities.com/Tokyo/5243/home_en.htm

  Rolf Claessen's Chemistry Index.
Detailed collection of chemistry links for spectroscopy, journals, software etc.


http://home.fuse.net/thecatalyst/

  The Catalyst.
This site has been developed specifically for the high school chemistry teacher, to provide a place for finding relevant information for use in the classroom.
It provides an extensive list of links and tools for the chemist or teacher.


http://www.chemplace.com

  The Chemistry Place.
Web resource for college and high school chemistry educators and their students.


http://www.aquafoam.com

  The Foam Book.
Information resources relating to some aqueous based foam systems, their technological applications, published papers and documents, patents, as well as identifying the major participants involved with the technology developments.


http://www.cooper.edu/engineering/chemechem/monte.html

 
The Molecular Monte Carlo Home Page.
An organized list of tutorials, software repositories, conferences and other useful online resources for scientists and engineers using Monte Carlo methods to study complex systems at the atomic and molecular level.


http://www.plasticsnet.com

  The Plastics Network.
Exists to provide you with a vast array of trade services that promote
online commerce and the exchange of ideas and information. Such services
include directories, job listings, free classified advertising, news, discussion forums, and the industry's most comprehensive database of product and service information.


http://neon.chem.ox.ac.uk/vrchemistry/

  The Virtual Chemistry Laboratory.
Three-dimensional simulated laboratory for the teaching of chemistry.
This laboratory will be modeled using virtual reality techniques
and it will contain interactive multimedia experiments. Essentially, the
student will be able to move around the lab in a web browser window and
choose to take part in experiments that are distributed around this virtual
lab.


http://www.chem.ucla.edu/chempointers.html


The World Wide Web Virtual Library - Chemistry.


http://www.liv.ac.uk/Chemistry/Links/links.html


WWW Links for Chemists. Very detailed collection of chemical links. Updated daily.


http://www.che.ufl.edu/WWW-CHE/index.html


WWW Virtual Library - Chemical Engineering.


http://www.unige.ch/crystal/w3vlc/crystal.index.html


WWW Virtual Library - Crystallography.


http://golgi.harvard.edu/biopages/biochem.html


WWW Virtual Library - Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.


http://golgi.harvard.edu/sequences.html


WWW Virtual Library - Biomolecules.



Search Engines:


http://altavista.digital.com/

  Alta Vista.

http://www.dejanews.com/

  DejaNews. Searchengine for newsgroups.

http://www.excite.com

  Excite.

http://www.hotbot.com

  HotBot.

http://guide.infoseek.com

  InfoSeek.

http://www.liszt.com

  Liszt. Search engine for mailing lists. Contains 67.000 entries.

http://www.lycos.com

  Lycos

http://www.mckinley.com

  Magellan.

http://www.yahoo.com

  Yahoo Server



Have fun, LT/


WISDOMwillWIN

foxy2

  • Guest
Re: Professional Chemistry Links
« Reply #1 on: April 30, 2001, 01:25:00 AM »

http://www.rscc.cc.tn.us/faculty/ward/1110/1110D.htm


Download the pdf's and you basically get a free general chemistry book.

http://www.rscc.cc.tn.us/faculty/sellin/121/121D.htm


This is another faculty's general chemistry info oganized in a way convienent to web browseing.  Good basic chemistry and lab info is available in other various places on this website.




Do Your Part To Win The War

LaBTop

  • Guest
Re: Professional Chemistry Links
« Reply #2 on: May 01, 2001, 07:53:00 AM »
Yep, that's the intention of a thread like this, anybody who has real interesting professional links can post them in here. LT/


WISDOMwillWIN

foxy2

  • Guest
Re: Professional Chemistry Links
« Reply #3 on: July 13, 2001, 10:48:00 AM »
Here is really good basic reactions info and more
If you are clueless as to what is being discussed at the hive go here.
Especially read "Functional Group Reactions"

http://www.chem.uic.edu/web1/OCOL-II/WIN/HOME.HTM





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foxy2

  • Guest
Common Latin Terms in Chemistry Texts
« Reply #4 on: May 14, 2001, 02:25:00 PM »
Latin terms are commonly found in chemical literature. In the past, Latin terms were to be italicized in the text. Recently, common Latin terms are not to be italicized according to the ACS Style Guide. A collection of commonly used Latin phrases and abbreviations along with their meanings are listed below.

ab initio –    from the beginning
ad infinitum – to infinity
ad nauseam –   to a sickening degree
a posteriori – from what follows after
a priori –     from previous
ca. –          (circa) about
cf. –          (confer) compare
de facto –     in fact, actual
de novo –      in a new form
e.g. –         (exempli gratia) for example
et al. –       (et alia) and others
etc. –         (et cetera) and so on
ex post facto – done after the fact
ibid –         in the same place
idem –         something previously mentioned
i.e. –         (id est) that is
in situ –      in place
in vitro –     (in glass) a biological reaction in an artificial apparatus
in vivo –      (in life) a biological reaction in a living cell or organism
ipso facto –    based on the same fact
loc. cit. –    (loco citato) in the place cited
non sequitur –  it does not follow
per se –        by itself
prima facia –   at first sight
q.e.d. –       (quo erat demonstratum) that which has been demonstrated
q.v. –         (quod vide) which see
sine qua non –  an absolute necessity
vide infra –    see below
vide supra –    see above

1. ACS Style Guide; A Manual for Authors and Editors; 2nd ed.; Dodd, J.S., Ed.; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1997.



Do Your Part To Win The War

foxy2

  • Guest
Common Solvent Purification Methods
« Reply #5 on: May 19, 2001, 10:52:00 PM »
Some bees might bee interested in how to purify their solvents.  To achieve the highest purity often requires more than just distilling. 

http://www.public.asu.edu/~slefler/Solvent.html



This is a nice table of various solvent drying agents and which solvents they are compatible with.  Very useful info for bee's who want dry honey.

http://www.public.asu.edu/~slefler/dryag.html



Here is a handy collection(table) of liquid reagents along with their molarities and densities.

http://www.public.asu.edu/~slefler/chemtable.html






Do Your Part To Win The War

foxy2

  • Guest
Tetrahydrofuran-THF Good Read
« Reply #6 on: July 31, 2001, 08:57:00 PM »
If you use much THF this document is a must read.
Has great test for peroxides and how to eliminate them.
Its from the experts.

http://www.dupont.com/terathane/thfpush.pdf





Do Your Part To Win The War

Rhodium

  • Guest
Re: Tetrahydrofuran-THF Good Read
« Reply #7 on: September 04, 2001, 03:57:00 PM »

http://courses.chem.psu.edu/chem39/reactions/reactions.html



A good overview of many functional group transformations and reactions. Unfortunately not with accompanying bibliography.

That's a nr one link for the eagerly learners! LT/

wirewound

  • Guest
Electronic Freedom of Information Act & US patents
« Reply #8 on: September 05, 2001, 01:47:00 AM »

http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/com/sol/foia/index.html


http://www.uspto.gov/



Separations Based on Physical Changes
not bad has some pics as well

http://dl.clackamas.cc.or.us/ch104-01/separations.htm

GOOD! LT/

ok lets  see maybe for the ones who cant get glassware,
or the old needs a bit of customising.

Homemade Mini Glassworking Lathe

http://www.big-list.com/glasslathe.html

  Very GOOD find!! LT/

Simple Distillation Instructions
       with good pics

http://www.oberlin.edu/chem/academics/chem205/205Laboratory/SimpleDistillation.html

  NICE. LT/



:-[ ok ill go hide in the corner

wirewound

  • Guest
Definitions of Chemical Terms
« Reply #9 on: September 06, 2001, 12:10:00 AM »

Post 209204 (missing)

(wirewound: "Definitions of Chemical Terms", Chemistry Discourse)


Best search engines for finding scientific information

Post 209543

(wirewound: "Best search engines for finding scientific informa", Chemistry Discourse)
VERY, very outdated, LT/

Organic Compounds Database

Post 209552 (missing)

(wirewound: "Organic Compounds Database", Chemistry Discourse)
Everybody really interested in chemistry calculations and much, much more, should download that Laborant software program up there in my links, unzip it, then click on the file with the nrs and an "e" in it, for english version. It is from 1998, but beats programs of hundreds of $$, it's FREE! LT/

:-[ im in the corner

Changed the post nrs for you, use [number], then you will see above. LT/

foxy2

  • Guest
Organic Chemistry Textbook
« Reply #10 on: September 06, 2001, 01:36:00 PM »
This is one of the very best virtual organic chemistry books i have ever seen.  Great for looking things up and also a great resource for those who want to really learn organic chemistry.

http://www.cem.msu.edu/~reusch/OrgPage/orghompg.htm



a BEAUTY! Now that's a real TEACHER! Best virtual chemistry ever seen, LT/


Do Your Part To Win The War

foxy2

  • Guest
Named Organic Reaction Databases
« Reply #11 on: September 06, 2001, 01:43:00 PM »
This database looks like a work in progress, however when its done it will be awsome!!!  Huge number of reactions with very good bibliographies.  Very nice.

http://www.pmf.ukim.edu.mk/PMF/Chemistry/reactions/rindex.htm



Here is another named reaction database, not quite as good as the above but still decent.  Has limited bibliographies.

http://www.monomerchem.com/display4.html




Do Your Part To Win The War

foxy2

  • Guest
Collection of Chemistry Links
« Reply #12 on: September 10, 2001, 11:16:00 AM »
Here is a list of many online chemistry resources

http://www.psigate.ac.uk/ROADS/subject-listing/chemistry/547.html



The VERY BEST Professional LINKS site seen, give full attention to Named Chemical Reactions, and much more links, Foxy2, keep them coming! Good work, lassie. LT/

And another really good site

http://www.organicworldwide.net/





Do Your Part To Win The War

wirewound

  • Guest
Distillation: How to Set Up a Distillation
« Reply #13 on: September 10, 2001, 03:19:00 PM »
from the start
How to Set Up a Distillation
Fractional Distillation
Vacuum Distillation
how full to fill the flask
proper level of the thermometer in the Y-adaptor

http://orgchem.colorado.edu/hndbksupport/dist/distsetup/distsetmain.html

GOOD!

EDIT: In one of the links (

http://orgchem.colorado.edu/hndbksupport/TLC/TLC.html

) I found these 2 TLC procedures at last:

http://orgchem.colorado.edu/hndbksupport/TLC/TLCprocedure.html


http://www.indiana.edu/~orgchem/movies/complt.mov


This is an animated graphics movie on TLC procedure.  LT/



:-[ im in the corner

wirewound

  • Guest
Journals: Chemistry and Chemical Engineering
« Reply #14 on: September 11, 2001, 05:34:00 PM »
seek and u shell find
Connecting to Socrates without a Stanford ID
If you do not have a Stanford ID, you can still:

connect to Socrates, Stanford's on-line catalog, now if your browser is set up to do telnet connections
or use any standard telnet program to connect to
forsythetn.stanford.edu 3100
If you are prompted for an account, type socrates

http://www-sul.stanford.edu/webhelp/nonsu.html



http://www-sul.stanford.edu/collect/ejourn/chema.html




im still in the corner :-[

foxy2

  • Guest
Good Sites
« Reply #15 on: September 19, 2001, 12:17:00 PM »
This site has a nice collection of search engines and a neat little chemistry message board.

http://www.chemspy.com/



This one is another huge collection of chemistry links.

http://www.liv.ac.uk/Chemistry/Links/links.html



Do Your Part To Win The War

wirewound

  • Guest
Good Sites
« Reply #16 on: September 22, 2001, 08:13:00 PM »
Chemical & Physical Properties in the Chemistry Library

http://www.chem.duke.edu/~chemlib/properties.html




WebElementsTM Scholar edition

http://www.webelements.com/



The Elements

http://www.eskimo.com/~ghawk/h-o/elements/elemnt.html



MELTING AND BOILING POINTS OF THE ELEMENTS

http://www.eskimo.com/~ghawk/h-o/boil.htm



CHEMICAL RESISTANCE CHART
(For Some Common Plastics vs. NaOH or KOH)

http://www.eskimo.com/~ghawk/h-o/chemchrt.htm



SciCentral gateway to online science/engineering resources

http://www.geocities.com/dsligar.geo/mlinks1.html



 
physics web

http://physicsweb.org/resources/



Virtual Library for the History of Science

http://www.asap.unimelb.edu.au/hstm/hstm_alphabetical.htm




yip still in the corner :-[  You can go back to your seat now, you'r excused ;) LT/

foxy2

  • Guest
Free Chemistry Software
« Reply #17 on: September 23, 2001, 11:51:00 AM »
Here is a big list of free chemistry software on the web

http://allserv.rug.ac.be/~tkuppens/chem.shtml



B E A U T I F U L !


Do Your Part To Win The War

wirewound

  • Guest
Biological Data, Safety Info, Laboratory Protocols
« Reply #18 on: September 30, 2001, 06:37:00 PM »
well ya never know just might help oneday soon i hope
Ring of Knowledge

Data on Biological Compounds
Oligonucleotide Vital Statistics
Amino Acids - Chemical Notation and Properties at IMB-Jena, Germany
Amino Acids -Images with Atomic Numbering at IMB-Jena, Germany
Abbreviation of Chemical Compounds at Freie Universitat-Berlin, Germany
Amino Acids at Freie Universitat-Berlin, Germany
Amino Acid Properties at New York U.
Monosaccharide Browser - Investigate Monosaccharide Structure at University of Leeds
The Fructan Page
Synthetic Peptide Properties at New York U.
Atlas of Protein Side-Chain Interactions at University College, London
Atlas of Side-Chain and Main-Chain Hydrogen Bonding at University College, London
The Antibody Research Page
Merck Manual on-line - An electronic version of the 16th edition. Access is free, but first time visitors must register.
The Porphyrin Page

 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Safety Related Documents on the WWW
U.K. searchers after data for making COSHH assessments, please note that some of the information on web sites derives from the US, and that safety data in these cases use American nomenclature.

Manual of Biosafety (UNIDO) at EMBRAPA, Brazil
MELs - Maximum exposure Limits - at the University of Oxford Physical and Theoretical Chemistry Lab
Lab Safety - Health & Safety Information at Oxford University Physical and Theoretical Chemistry Laboratory
DEHS page at U. Indiana - Page with local safety manual, pointers to MSDS databases and a large section on hazardous waste
Material Safety Datasheets at Oxford
Occupational Safety Links - Large number of safety topics addressed at the Institute of Occupational Safety Engineering, Finland
Biotech-Support - Decision Documents and Risk Assessments on Different Microorganisms Used by Man at EPA
Ethidium Bromide Disposal

 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Methods in Molecular Biology on-line
Molecular Biology Techniques Manual at U. Cape Town Department of Microbiology
Signal Transduction Group - Protocols for Molecular Biology, Cell Biology and Biochemistry
Materials & Methods Gopher at Bio-Indiana or gopher search Laboratory Protocols at Bio-Indiana
Applied Molecular Biology - Beginners Laboratory Manual
Templeton Lab Protocols - Large range of protocols with files in PDF format at CWRU
Molecular Biology Protocols including DNA purification, Library preparation, Blotting, Sequencing, oligos, at NWFSC-NOAA with further site links
Joslin Diabetes Centre - DNA Core Facility - DNA sequencing, Synthesis and Fragment Analysis
ABROS lab Comprehensive Protocol Collection - Molecular biology protocols (and others)
Molecular Biology Manuals - at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Molecular Biology Core Facility
Talbot/Hamer Protocols - for Construction and Screening of cDNA Libraries
Molecular Biology Protocols - covering a large range of topics at the Genome Sequencing Centre - Washington U.
Molecular Biology Protocols - at The University of Oklahoma: Well organised list of protocols with excellent coverage of recombinant DNA methods (isolation, sequencing, PCR)
Protocols for Molecular Biology - An excellent itemised list of links to methods and reagents at IFR, Norwich
Technical information on 2-D PAGE at ExPASY, Switzerland
Interaction Trap - Method to clone cDNAs of proteins that interact with a known protein
Guide to DNA Cloning in E. coli at UWF
Guide to Protein and Peptide Cleavage Recipes at New York U.
BioGuide - PCR Guide at Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel
Anderson Lab - Non-radioactive In Situ Hybridization Protocols
PCR in situ (1) PCR information at U. Minnesota (part 1)
PCR in situ (2) PCR information at U. Minnesota (part 2)
BBHelp - Molecular Biology Help at U. Cape Town, South Africa
Primer on Molecular Genetics at John Hopkins
RFLP Tutorial at the Wadsworth Centre, New York State Dept of Health
Boomerang DNA Amplification - a single-primer method for amplifying DNA fragments 
Paul N. Hengen's Home Page - FAQs for BIOSCI, Methods, link to BioMOO, TIBS homepage, Lab protocols. Also check out the Methods and Reagents TIBS Column Archive
Methods Database - Searchable data for Methods/Protocols, E. Coli strains, cell lines or hybridomas at the University of Nottingham
Rapid Cyclist - the newsletter for the Rapid Cycler user's group.
DNAcers -a forum by which molecular biologists may exchange technical information and assist in troubleshooting 

 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dictionaries and Reference
One-look Dictionaries Search or browse Dictionaries on-line 
Dictionary of Cell Biology at IBLS-Glasgow University
Computing Dictionary
Cell Biology Laboratory Manual - Cell biology course manual, including useful appendices on spectrophotometry, centrifugation, etc, at Biology Department, Gustavus Adolphus College
AE-Glossary of Scientific Terms at Genentech
French Molecular Biology Dictionary and its English-French version at CITI2, France
Fundamental Physical Constants at Freie Universitat-Berlin, Germany
Mathematics & Biology at IMB-Jena, Germany
Metabolic Control Analysis at the University of Aberystwyth
Photobiology Methods and Techniques on-line Methods and data for photobiologists (UV levels etc)
WebElements (Periodic Table) at the University of Sheffield
Dictionaries and translation - at Frontiers in Bioscience's Virtual Library
James Mao's Research Page - Forms for input into dictionaries, thesauri and more
Links to other dictionaries - mostly computer/internet and jargon.



http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/1957/manuals.html



SciCentral - Biological Sciences
A comprehensive site organised by subject and specialty. Provides links to sites on such subjects as immunology, molecular and cell biology, biochemistry, neurosciences, wildlife, fisheries and biodiversity, biotechnology, plant sciences and virology. Also contains links to information about conferences, databases, discussion groups, job searching, research communications, educational materials, institutions and journals

http://www.sciquest.com/cgi-bin/ncommerce3/ExecMacro/sci_index.d2w/report



SCIRUS

Scirus is the world's most comprehensive search engine specifically designed for finding highly relevant scientific information.  Searches can be restricted to broad subject areas, eg: Agricultural and Biological Sciences, Biosciences, Environmental Sciences, Pharmacology, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering of Life Sciences

http://scirus.com/




glassblowing

http://www.ecu.edu/chem/glassblowing/





yippy back on the seat :P

PEYOTE

  • Guest
Chemistry Software again
« Reply #19 on: September 30, 2001, 09:40:00 PM »

foxy2

  • Guest
Re: Good Sites
« Reply #20 on: December 17, 2001, 01:31:00 PM »
Physical Properties Datasheets

http://www.lesw.dircon.co.uk/PhysProps/index.htm



They have some good physical property data for some chemicals of interest to bees


Here is an ok Organic Chemistry Book

http://members.aol.com/profchm/organic1.html


http://members.aol.com/profchm/organic2.html




Having trouble with common chemistry terms?
Here is a glossary of Chemical Terms

http://chemed.chem.purdue.edu/glossary/index.html



Here is a fairly good review of Chemistry, has organic and lots more.

http://chemed.chem.purdue.edu/genchem/topicreview/index.html




Do Your Part To Win The War

wirewound

  • Guest
Re: Good Site
« Reply #21 on: December 18, 2001, 10:57:00 PM »


wirewound

  • Guest
Links to text and journals
« Reply #23 on: January 02, 2002, 06:33:00 PM »
These links may lead to the full text of the journals, to tables of contents

http://www.ch.cam.ac.uk/ChemJournals.html


foxy2

  • Guest
Re: Professional Chemistry Links
« Reply #24 on: January 16, 2002, 09:38:00 AM »
This might bee of interest to bee's with no background in chemistry.  Not cheap but it looks informative.

The organic chemistry volume

http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/JCESoft/CCA/CCA5/MAIN/HOME.HTM



Here is where you order it from and you can look at the contents of all the volumes.

http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/JCESoft/Programs/CCA/index.html



I hate my government, does this mean I'm a terrorist??

foxy2

  • Guest
Re: Professional Chemistry Links
« Reply #25 on: January 31, 2002, 12:51:00 PM »
Some Free Online Journals

ARKIVOC Free Online Journal of Organic Chemistry

http://www.arkat.org/arkat/journal/enter.html



JOURNAL OF THE BRAZILIAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY

http://jbcs.sbq.org.br/jbcs/jbcsonline.html



Korean Chemical Society(2 journals)

http://www.kcsnet.or.kr/kcs/journals/journal_index.htm



Here is a Madline search engine and free journal listing(305 journals)

http://highwire.stanford.edu/




Here is a large listing of Organic Named Reactions(Not yet on Rhodiums Page)
You need to register with Chemfinder(one of the following should work)

http://themerckindex.cambridgesoft.com/TheMerckIndex/NameReactions/default.asp


http://themerckindex.chemfinder.com/TheMerckIndex/NameReactions/TOC.asp



Fully Informed Jury!

(http://www.fija.org/)

Rhodium

  • Guest
Re: Professional Chemistry Links
« Reply #26 on: February 01, 2002, 01:53:00 PM »

http://www.msdssearch.com/DBLinksN.htm

MSDS Search Engine

http://www.scirus.com

Science oriented Search Engine  Wirewound beated you with that one for 4 months in

Post 218762

(wirewound: "Biological Data, Safety Info, Laboratory Protocols", Methods Discourse)
, but we appreciate the effort made, hehhe ;) LT/

PolytheneSam

  • Guest
Re: Professional Chemistry Links
« Reply #27 on: February 04, 2002, 01:10:00 AM »
Reactions.

http://www.liv.ac.uk/Chemistry/Links/reactions.html



I found this while looking for indole and pyrrole links.

http://www.ibiblio.org/patents/class/CLASS548.html


Also see Post 261178 (not existing) .  The manual of classification pages on the uspto web site seem to load slower than the one above.

Also see:

amphetamines, etc.

http://www.ibiblio.org/patents/class/CLASS564.html



A lot of organic chemistry

http://www.ibiblio.org/patents/class/CLASS568.html



Inorganic compounds

http://www.ibiblio.org/patents/class/CLASS423.html



Electrochemistry

http://www.ibiblio.org/patents/class/CLASS205.html



USPTO classes

http://www.uspto.gov/go/classification/selectbynum.htm



Molecular mass calculator (need JavaScript on)

http://people.ouc.bc.ca/woodcock/programmes/mm-find2.htm




http://www.geocities.com/dritte123/PSPF.html


foxy2

  • Guest
Online Books
« Reply #28 on: February 06, 2002, 07:38:00 PM »
Online Books of All Kinds, Including Chemistry

http://digital.library.upenn.edu/books/


http://www.ipl.org/reading/books/


http://www.blackmask.com/


http://www.nap.edu/


http://www.books-on-line.com/




The chemistry section has some neat very very old books.  The radiochemistry books have some decent chemical reactions/info about different elements, such as how to make the different salts ect.

http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/subjectstart?QD



Some more very old chemistry texts are here
Check out John French's Art of Distillation (1651)

http://www.library.upenn.edu/etext/collections/science/index.html



Many bees can learn something here
Organic Syntheses- Details the synthesis of 25 useful chemicals

http://www.blackmask.com/books21c/rgsyndex.htm



Here is a comprehensive lab safety book for anyone interested

http://www.nap.edu/catalog/4911.html



Here is a Glassware Gallery

http://www.ilpi.com/inorganic/glassware/index.html



foxy2

  • Guest
Re: Online Books
« Reply #29 on: February 23, 2002, 01:44:00 AM »
Chemistry Links

http://www.netaccess.on.ca/~dbc/cic_hamilton/other.html



Advanced Organic Lab Experiments

http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/GIC/organic_lab.html



Good research group. Sonochemistry and electrochemistry mostly.  All of their publications can bee downloaded for free.  It might bee worth a browse.

http://physchem.ox.ac.uk/~rgc/home.html



Flip

  • Guest
Re: Professional Chemistry Links
« Reply #30 on: February 24, 2002, 12:21:00 AM »
The 7 Golden Rules of Chemistry
[

http://neon.cm.utexas.edu/academic/courses/Spring2001/CH610B/Iverson/New%20Dreamweaver%20Files/goldrules.html

]
Explain a lot about the reasons organic molecules interact the way that they do.

Rhodium

  • Guest
Chemguide - Helping you to understand Chemistry
« Reply #31 on: March 26, 2002, 01:30:00 PM »
Atomic Structure and Bonding

Covers basic atomic properties (electronic structures, ionisation energies, electron affinities, atomic and ionic radii), bonding (including intermolecular bonding) and structures (ionic, molecular, giant covalent and metallic).

Basic Organic Chemistry

Includes help on bonding, naming and isomerism, and a discussion of organic acids and bases.

Organic Reaction Mechanisms

Covers all the mechanisms required by the current UK advanced level syllabuses.

Instrumental analysis

Explains how you can analyse substances using machines - mass spectrometry, infra-red spectroscopy and NMR.

Calculations in A'level Chemistry

Describes a source of help for all the calculations you are likely to meet in either AS or A level chemistry.

http://www.chemguide.co.uk/


PolytheneSam

  • Guest
missing post
« Reply #32 on: April 06, 2002, 02:04:00 AM »
Post 261178 (not existing) is missing.  Also see

Post 264778

(PolytheneSam: "Re: Professional Chemistry Links", Methods Discourse)
.  In post 261178 I discussed this page

http://www.uspto.gov/go/classification/selectbynum.htm

and class 74 subclass DIG9 on perpetual motion gimmicks.  The uspto page needs to have Javascript enabled to work.


http://www.geocities.com/dritte123/PSPF.html
The hardest thing to explain is the obvious

LaBTop

  • Guest
Sam,
« Reply #33 on: April 06, 2002, 07:18:00 AM »
I compared the missing post nr 261178 with our lists of deleted posts in the Staff forum, and it didn't match. Also not with wildcards before and/or after the number. That means that the post is lost in some other magical way, I did not delete it by accident. LT/

WISDOMwillWIN

Antibody2

  • Guest
nice periodic table of elements
« Reply #34 on: May 06, 2002, 04:42:00 AM »

foxy2

  • Guest
Ammonia NH3 annie info
« Reply #35 on: May 22, 2002, 08:46:00 AM »

http://www.laroche-ammonia.com/Library/lm.htm



http://nh3.org/



Those who give up essential liberties for temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety

foxy2

  • Guest
General Reference
« Reply #36 on: May 22, 2002, 09:26:00 AM »
Want to find info online on any subject?
Go here

http://www.refdesk.com/



Chemistry Webzine

http://www.acdlabs.com/webzine/



Worm sperm  :)

http://www.mcb.arizona.edu/wardlab/


foxy2

  • Guest
Another Solvent Property Database
« Reply #37 on: August 09, 2002, 06:36:00 PM »

http://www.bandj.com/BJSolvents.html



Those who give up essential liberties for temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety

bujinkan

  • Guest
Measurement standards, plastic resin codes
« Reply #38 on: September 12, 2002, 06:43:00 PM »
Probably a repost but Ill put it again for quick reference. Feel free to delete if its an obvious repost....i needed it.
SI units

http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/units.html


units oustide the SI

http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/outside.html



Illustrated glassware dictionary

http://www.glassonline.com/dictionary/index.HTML


Types of glass.

http://www.cmog.org/page.cfm?page=279


Resin codes:
ACL          acetal (polyoxymethylene)
ECTFE        Halar® ECTFE (ethylene-chlorotrifluoroethylene copolymer)
ETFE         Tefzel® ETFE (ethylene-tetrafluoroethylene)
FEP          Teflon® FEP (fluorinated ethylene propylene)
FLPE         fluorinated high-density polyethylene
HDPE         high-density polyethylene
LDPE         low-density polyehylene
PC           polycarbonate
PCT      poly (1,4 cyclohexylene dimethylene terephthalate)
PET          polyethylene terephthalate
PFA          Teflon® PFA (perfluoroalkoxy)
PMMA         polymethyl methacrylate (acrylic)
PMP          polymethylpentene ("TPX")
PP           polypropylene
PPCO         polypropylene copolymer
PS           polystyrene
PSF          polysulfone
PUR          polyurethane
PVC          polyvinyl chloride
PVDF         polyvinylidene fluoride
TFE          Teflon® TFE (tetrafluoroethylene)
TPE          thermoplastic elastomer
XLPE         cross-linked high-density polyethylene
 

If I'm reading this correctly, and I like to think that I am.....

wirewound

  • Guest
Ephedra sinica and all you need to know
« Reply #39 on: September 27, 2002, 08:05:00 AM »

wirewound

  • Guest
the best place to search
« Reply #40 on: October 18, 2002, 04:57:00 PM »
THE "VIRTUAL" ~ CHEMISTRY CENTER  chemical

 

http://www-sci.lib.uci.edu/HSG/GradChemistry.html#CHEMICALS




Links for Chemists

http://www.liv.ac.uk/Chemistry/Links/links.html



  


the virtual Bioscience


http://www-sci.lib.uci.edu/HSG/GradBioscience.html



:)  ;D  ;)  :-[  8)  ::)  :(  >:(  :o  :P

GC_MS

  • Guest
NMR
« Reply #41 on: October 19, 2002, 12:45:00 AM »
Basics of NMR:

http://www.cis.rit.edu/htbooks/nmr/



WOMAN.ZIP: Great Shareware, but be careful of viruses...

GC_MS

  • Guest
Named compounds and reagents
« Reply #42 on: October 21, 2002, 11:10:00 AM »
Ever wondered what Meerwein salt and Hünig's base are?

http://www.chem.wisc.edu/areas/reich/handouts/NameReagents/namedreag-cont.htm



geh in die knie. wackle mit den hueften. klatsch in die haende. und tanz den mussolini.

PolytheneSam

  • Guest
First posted by java.
« Reply #43 on: January 12, 2003, 10:55:00 PM »

foxy2

  • Guest
IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology
« Reply #44 on: February 08, 2003, 04:48:00 AM »
IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology
This online version of the IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology corresponds to the second edition (1997), compiled by Alan D. McNaught and Andrew Wilkinson (Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, UK).

http://www.iupac.org/publications/compendium/index.html




AcroMed biomedical acronym database
AcroMed is a computer generated database of biomedical acronyms and the associated long forms extracted from the last year of Medline abstracts (2001).

http://gungadin.cs.brandeis.edu/~weiluo/main3.htm


foxy2

  • Guest
Electronic Journal Miner
« Reply #45 on: February 08, 2003, 05:05:00 AM »
Electronic Journal Miner
This is really cool.

http://ejournal.coalliance.org/




KartOO Search Engine
Neat little search engine.

http://www.kartoo.com/


java

  • Guest
The National Institute of Standards and Technology
« Reply #46 on: February 11, 2003, 04:37:00 PM »
NIST Chemistry WebBook
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Chemistry WebBook provides chemical and physical property data for a variety of compounds. The data are from collections maintained by the NIST Standard Reference Data Program and outside contributors.  Please check your software compatibility from the plug-in information before drawing a structure
It is available free.

http://www.chemweb.com/databases/webbook


thallium

  • Guest
Merck's ChemDAT online
« Reply #47 on: February 17, 2003, 10:44:00 PM »
Merck's ChemDAT online:

http://www.merck.de/english/services/chemdat/english/index.htm



useful for looking up chemicals, and safety data sheets. Free copy of the whole thing is avaliable on CD.


java

  • Guest
Microwave chemistry and other tools
« Reply #48 on: February 26, 2003, 12:44:00 AM »
Sorry if it's a repeat reference, I found it resourceful and interesting with articles on Microwave chemistry, and some  other tools.

http://www.cyf-kr.edu.pl/~pcbogdal/




PolytheneSam

  • Guest
IPC
« Reply #49 on: March 14, 2003, 03:04:00 AM »
International Patent Classification (IPC). 
This page gives a good explanation of the classifiaction system.

http://www.patentsonline.com.au/patent/pipccode.html



Classification:

http://www.wipo.org/classifications/fulltext/new_ipc/index.htm



See also

Post 264778

(PolytheneSam: "Re: Professional Chemistry Links", Methods Discourse)



java

  • Guest

java

  • Guest
Journals, science search , cold fusion?
« Reply #51 on: March 23, 2003, 06:17:00 PM »
Entry to chemistry sources , but then you'll find much more...

http://www.world.std.com/~mica/cftlt.html


see also a complete list of journals, chem included
at........

http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/..........then

select e-journals from side bar

and a good science search engine at .......

http://www.psigate.ac.uk/


and a good chem guide helps the newbee understand chemistry........

http://www.chemguide.co.uk/index.html#top


enjoy the contents.....java


java

  • Guest
Chiral separation by HPLC
« Reply #52 on: March 27, 2003, 06:35:00 PM »
This is a good listing of chromatographic representation of many compounds with chiral separationby HPLC

http://www.registech.com/chiral/chiralappl.html




java

  • Guest
Glossary for Organic Chemistry terms and .....
« Reply #53 on: April 20, 2003, 04:31:00 AM »
GLOSSARY OF TERMS USED IN
PHYSICAL ORGANIC CHEMISTRY

(IUPAC Recommendations 1994)

http://www.chem.qmul.ac.uk/iupac/gtpoc/

    glossary to organic and bio terms and words


Rhodium

  • Guest
chemical data files
« Reply #54 on: April 26, 2003, 07:55:00 PM »

Rhodium

  • Guest
http://www.neurotransmitter.net
« Reply #55 on: June 18, 2003, 12:09:00 AM »
Go to

http://www.neurotransmitter.net

right away this instant - it is a great information resource of collected and sorted abstracts, one could say that it is kind of like the Neuroscience/Neuropharmacology answer to my own Psychoactive Synthesis archive - it is also a one-man project.

From the description of the site:

Neurotransmitter.net is a unique project involving research from the fields of neuroscience, neuropsychology, psychiatry, genetics, and others. The sole creator of Neurotransmitter.net is Shawn Thomas. By compiling and sorting dozens of abstracts on specific topics, I seek to introduce a context to research articles that cannot easily be obtained while reading individual abstracts. When an abstract is viewed in context, I believe that an individual has a greater chance of understanding that information in relation to similar research produced by other sources. Neurotransmitter.net is in part an experiment to determine the usefulness of using HTML to organize and present large amounts of scientific information through the medium of the Internet.

Many of the pages on Neurotransmitter.net may also serve as general reviews on various topics. Because the details of research efforts are often difficult to condense into just a few words, abstract compilations may offer more comprehensive reviews of complex subjects like the genetics of bipolar disorder. Unlike published reviews, pages on Neurotransmitter.net may be updated to reflect the consistently changing nature of the neurosciences. I do not intend to attempt to include every possible article on each page; PubMed is available to those who demand such a database.

The intended audience of this site includes anyone interested in the material chosen for the site. I hope that the research community will embrace Neurotransmitter.net and the concept behind it.

java

  • Guest

java

  • Guest
International Critical Tables of chemistry.......
« Reply #57 on: June 28, 2003, 12:42:00 AM »
International Critical Tables of Numerical Data, Physics, Chemistry and Technology (1st Electronic Edition)                  


http://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/en/




GC_MS

  • Guest
Named things in chemistry and physics
« Reply #58 on: July 13, 2003, 02:08:00 PM »
Named things in chemistry and physics

http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/



Don't forget to check out the "Interesting Anecdotes of Chemists"


LaBTop

  • Guest
Electro chemistry
« Reply #59 on: July 13, 2003, 11:17:00 PM »

http://www.l-chem.com/Product_Description.htm


Cell-Design is a comprehensive software package for computer-aided design of electrochemical cells. The software provides complete simulation of electrochemical cells with user specified geometry, chemistry, and operating conditions. The software is specifically designed for personal computers and workstations running under Windows 95, 98, 2000 and NT.

http://www.l-chem.com/Examples.htm


STRIP (REEL-TO-REEL) PLATING :

http://www.l-chem.com/Papers/Reel-to-reel%20%28moving%20strip%29%20plating.pdf

  Reel-to-reel (moving strip) plating.

I'm thinking of a copper bandolier which can be plated with Pd or Pt. In many wackers you could offer the cut pieces of copper strip plated with your catalyst of choice to solute in acidic environment, leaving the Pd or Pt as the catalyst behind.
The deposit builds up from zero thickness at the strip entry into the cell, to the final thickness of 34 µm at the strip exit (upper left), for a strip velocity of 0.3 m/s.(30 cm per SECOND!)
This technique will get you :
Micro-scale roughness and dendrites formation on resistive moving strip.
Detailed roughness build-up on sub mm and micron scales RRW (reel-to reel)

Perhaps even Kevlar or any strong carbon strip material could be found to be plated!  LT/


java

  • Guest
Computer generated chemistry reactions...
« Reply #60 on: July 14, 2003, 05:05:00 PM »
A visual archive of computer generated animations of reactions like,pinacol rearrangement, enols and more....

http://www.colby.edu/chemistry/OChem/demoindex.html#table



see also for more resources,

http://www.colby.edu/chemistry/resources.html



Edit: spelling corrected....


Rhodium

  • Guest
A visual archive of computer generated ...
« Reply #61 on: July 14, 2003, 06:29:00 PM »
A visual archive of computer generated animations of reactions like pinnacle .....and more

I assume you are referring to the Pinacol Rearrangement, right? Watch out with that spelling, it makes a lot of difference in chemistry sometimes.

java

  • Guest
Advanced Chemistry lab with procedures
« Reply #62 on: July 17, 2003, 06:06:00 AM »
Advanced Organic Lab Experiments

 Technique 1. Identification Of Unknown Compounds
 Technique 2. Flash Chromatography.
 Technique 3. Advanced Chemical Information Technology
 Technique 4. Preparative Vacuum Sublimation
 Technique 5. Advanced Molecular Modelling
 Technique 6. Reactions In Liquid Ammonia
 Technique 7. Vacuum Line Technique And Anaerobic Handling
 Technique 8. Reaction In A Pressure Bottle
 Technique 9. Advanced NMR Spectroscopy And 3D Interpretation
 Technique 11. Reactions Of Octal-2-Ones
 Technique 12. Catalytic Hydrogenation At Atmospheric Pressure
 Technique 15. Reactions In Liquid Ammonia
 Technique 16. Reductions With Lithium Aluminium Hydride
 Technique 18. Ozonolysis Of An Olefin
 Technique 19. Photochemistry Of Santonin
 Technique 20. Multi-Stage Syntheses

http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/GIC/organic_lab.html




java

  • Guest
The Organic Laboratory
« Reply #63 on: July 17, 2003, 06:13:00 AM »
Distribution Coefficients.
Extraction.
Melting Points.
Methylcyclohexenes.
Catalytic Hydrogenation.
Grignard Reactions.
Beilstein Test
Preparation of Butyl Bromide.
Oxidative Coupling of an Alkyne.



http://ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/organic_lab/




java

  • Guest
Advanced level chemistry
« Reply #64 on: July 17, 2003, 06:40:00 AM »
Advanced Level Chemistry

Topic 1 Atomic Structure syllabus  summary    checklist
Topic 2 Quantitative chemistry syllabus  summary    checklist
Topic 3 Structure and Bonding syllabus  summary    checklist
Topic 4 Oxidation and reduction and the transition elements syllabus  summary    checklist
Topic 5 Periodic Table syllabus   summary    checklist
Module 1 exam questions        June 95          June 96
Module 1 answers             June 95      June 96
 

Module 2 (CH2) - 6082

Topic 6 Energetics I syllabus  summary    checklist
Topic 7 Chemical equilibrium syllabus  summary    checklist
Topic 8 Acid/base equilibria syllabus  summary    checklist
Topic 9 Chemical kinetics syllabus  summary    checklist
Topic 10 Nomenclature of organic chemistry syllabus   summary    checklist
Topic 11 Isomerism syllabus   summary    checklist
Topic 12 Reaction mechanisms syllabus  summary    checklist     multimedia
Topic 13 Characteristic tests for organic compounds   syllabus  summary    checklist
Topic 14 Important applications   syllabus   summary    checklist
Topic 15 Bonding in organic compounds   syllabus        summary         checklist
Module 2 exam questions         Jun 98        Jan 99     June 99

Module 3 (CH3) - 6083

Topic 16 Energetics II   syllabus  summary    checklist
Topic 17 Redox equilibria including quantitative aspects  syllabus  summary    checklist
Topic 18 Gaseous and heterogeneous equilibria   syllabus   summary    checklist
Topic 19 Groups 1 and 2   syllabus  summary    checklist
Topic 20 The chlor-alkali industry   syllabus   summary    checklist
Topic 21 Groups 3 and 4   syllabus   summary    checklist
Topic 22 Group 7   syllabus  summary    checklist
Module 3 exam questions      Jan 98          June98
Module 3 answers                 Jan98

Module 4 (CH4) - 6084

Topic 23 Chemistry of organic compounds   syllabus   summary        checklist        multimedia
Topic 24 Organic synthesis   syllabus   summary            checklist
Topic 25 Organic analysis   syllabus   summary              checklist
Topic 26 Phase equilibria   syllabus   summary
Module 4 exam questions      Jan 98        June 98
Synoptic Paper (CH6) -6086

Practical Test (CH8) - 6088

school science uk 


http://www.wbateman.demon.co.uk/Adv-Chem.htm




midway

  • Guest
government household chemical list
« Reply #65 on: July 22, 2003, 01:45:00 AM »

http://hpd.nlm.nih.gov



this is a nice site, search household products by type and name for their contents.

also, type in any given chemical and find a list of products containing it, with percentage and other information.

Very useful resourse for bees that have to, or choose go over-the-counter.


http://ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/erd/index.search


The above link is a chemfinder style search engine. its not as good, but it might help you out when chemfinder goes down, as it seems to do from time to time.

http://www.pesticideinfo.org/Search_Chemicals.jsp


This one is limited to pesticides.

sorry for any reposts.

-midway

java

  • Guest
Index of Organic Chemistry Educational Material
« Reply #66 on: July 24, 2003, 04:06:00 PM »

http://people.ouc.bc.ca/woodcock/



Note: Not sure if previously listed, I found it to be a good resource link.


Rhodium

  • Guest
French Analysis of Illicit Drugs with refs
« Reply #67 on: August 06, 2003, 04:17:00 AM »

http://www.ofdt.fr/BDD/sintes/notes.htm



OFDT - SINTES
Observatorie Francais des Drogues et des Toxicomanies - Système d'Identification National des Toxiques et Substances

Great French site where illicit drug data are collected, such as how much of what drug was encountered where, how much of what drug a certain tablet contains, and lots of references for the toxicology and pharmacology of many illicit drugs.

java

  • Guest
General O=CH chemistry directory
« Reply #68 on: August 10, 2003, 07:53:00 PM »

wirewound

  • Guest
Chemical Hazards & Safety Links
« Reply #69 on: September 07, 2003, 04:24:00 PM »
Chemical Hazards    UK
www.chcs.org.uk
Chemical Hazards Communications Society is a very active group which holds meetings, shares information and produces a Newsletter.  The site is growing and has many useful links, including a list of relevant European Union Directives.

Chemical hazards: Chemical Incidents Hotline              UK
www.natfocus.uwic.ac.uk
Chemical Incidents Hotline  is based at the University of Wales in Cardiff it aims to provide a 24 hour, 365 day a year service to receive notification of incidents in the UK and to provide a contact point for Government. This site also aims to alert officials at the Departments of Health for England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales to public health aspects of chemical incidents and to provide information on such incidents.

Chemical safety     BELGIUM
www.cefic.be
European Chemical Industry Council covers activities, long-range research, useful links, products, press information, diary of events, health, safety and environment information.

Chemical safety    BELGIUM
www.ecetoc.org
European Centre for Ecotoxicology and Toxicology of Chemicals was established in 1978 as a scientific non-commercial association by 50 top companies with interests in the manufacturer and use of chemicals. ECETOC acts as an independent, peer-reviewed technical resource to all concerned with identification of research needs and provision of scientific rational for the assessment of the health effects and environment impact. Partner to organisations such as the World Health Organisation - WHO, the International Programme on Chemical Safety-IPCS, and the European Commission. ECETOC works closely with its partners to establish a scientific foundation for the development of legislation in chemicals.

Chemical safety               ITALY

http://edexim.ei.jrc.it


EDEXIM ONLINE-INFO gives information about exports and imports of certain dangerous chemicals. These are chemicals subject to notification according to European Council Regulation EEC 2455/92.  The data includes information on Banned Or Severely Restricted BOSR substances, classification and labelling, including risk and safety phrases: chemicals subject to Prior Informed Consent PIC according to the UNEP/FAO PIC procedure, as well as a list of Designated National Authorities involved.

Chemical safety            LUXEMBOURG

http://europa.eu.int/comm/enterprise/chemicals/competiv/risc/db_en.htm


The Chemical Information Network links to members APME, CEFIC, CEPE, EFMA, FEICA.

Chemical safety     SWITZERLAND
www.who.int/ifcs
Intergovernmental Forum on  Chemical Safety IFCS is concerned with chemical safety issues and has information about national focal points, meetings including regional meetings. It also has links to other worldwide organisations in industry and non governmental organisations.

Chemical safety      SWITZERLAND
www.who.int/ipcs
International Programme on Chemical Safety programme of three co-operating organisations, UNEP, ILO and WHO implementing activities relating to chemical safety. The main role of International Programme on Chemical Safety is to establish the scientific basis for the safe use of chemicals and to strengthen national capabilities and capacities for chemical safety. Links to other information.

Chemical safety    SWITZERLAND
www.who.int/iomc
Inter-Organization Programme for the Sound Management of Chemicals consists of a number of major organisations such as the UNEP, FAI, ILO, WHO, UNIDO, UNITAR and OECD committed to improving knowledge about chemicals. There are also links to all the major organisations sites and information.

Chemical safety        SWITZERLAND

http://irptc.unep.ch/


United Nations Environment Chemicals and the Global Environmental Epidemiology Network Projects includes the Pollutant Release and Transfer register PRTR, Persistent Organic Pollutants POPS and International Register on Biosafety IRB amongst other data. Useful site.

Chemical Safety       UK
www.cia.org.uk
The Chemical Industries Association website contains new, information, details of the CIA, membership details, responsible care and also information about the chemical industry

Chemical Safety         UK
www.sourcerer.co.uk
Sourcerer is the gateway to the Chemical Industry of the United Kingdom. Sourcerer will guide you quickly to the chemical products and services available from the UK and to the companies who can supply what you a wealth of information including a Chemical Directory of companies, products, services, Code of Conduct, The Sourcerer Concise Chemical Index which lists over 100,000 chemicals and services. News and links to affiliated trade associations.

Chemical safety     UK
www.chemind.org
Chemistry and Industry Magazine linked with the Society of Chemistry and Industry.  Gives details of new editions and also other useful chemical information.

Chemical safety           UK
www.eevl.ac.uk/engineering/
Edinburgh Engineering Virtual Library provides an excellent gateway to quality chemical and chemical engineering information websites and links.

Chemical safety       UK
www.chemsoc.org
Royal Society of Chemistry, details of journals, books, and many services.

Chemical safety     UK
www.liv.ac.uk/Chemistry/Links/links.html
University of Liverpool Chemical Information Service contains extensive information, material safety datasheets MSDS, journals, and many links to other useful chemical sources of information. Provides an excellent gateway to quality environmental engineering information.

Chemical safety   UK
www.joulepcl.ox.ac.uk/MSDS/
University of Oxford Material Safety Datasheets MSDS Service extensive site covering carcinogens, Chemical Abstracts Service CAS numbers, flash points low, highly toxic compounds, Hazard Codes UN, gases, glove materials, maximum exposure limits, foreign languages databases, MSDS, peroxides, risk and safety phrases, shock sensitive materials, chemical synonyms, teratogens, toxicity abbreviations.

Chemical safety             UK
www.shef.ac.uk/~chem
University of Sheffield extensive chemical source containing CHEMDEX, a well organised list of chemistry sites.

Chemical safety         USA

http://membership.acs.org/c/chas/


Aims of this multi-disciplined group is to promote chemical health and safety in the workplace and in society.  Has information n the properties of chemicals which affect health and safety directly or through the environment, and promotes exchange of such information.

Chemical safety           USA
www.chemcenter.org
American Chemical Society service designed to bring together the resources of both the American Chemical Society and Chemical Abstracts Services.

Chemical safety                     USA
www.jtbaker.com
J T Baker organisation has a range of chemical information, material safety data sheets MSDS, news, events, technical advice and guidance

Chemical safety       USA

http://info.cas.org


Chemical Abstracts Service site gives details of products, publications and services.

Chemical safety           USA
www.chemspy.com
Chemspy offers chemical and chemistry information databases, dictionaries, journals, latest news and selected links

Chemical safety        USA
www.chemsafety.gov
Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board is dedicated to industrial chemical safety and protecting workers, the public and the environment. Contains News, reports, investigations, CSB five-year strategic plan, conferences and meetings, details of the Chemical Incident Reports Centre and links to other chemical sites.

Chemical safety               USA
www.ilpi.com/msds/index.chtm
Material Safety Datasheets information, includes  'What is a MSDS', glossary, software, links to other governmental agencies and useful sites.

Chemical safety       USA
www.chemweb.com
Chemical information from MDL covers many services including discussion groups, journals etc.

Chemical safety      USA
www.cdc.gov/niosh/chemsfpg.html
National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health Chemical Collection contains an extensive collection of prior published documents which acts as a convenient pointer to various materials available on the NIOSH website. These include e.g. Alerts, Criteria Documents, Current Intelligence Bulletins, Hazard Reviews, International Chemical Safety Cards and many other links.

Chemical safety   USA

http://webbook.nist.gov/chemistry


National Institute of Standards and Technology's Chemistry web book contains formula, partial formula, Chemical Abstract Service CAS numbers and National Institute of Standards and Technology Reference Databases.

Chemical safety       USA
www.schs.org
Society for Chemical Hazard Communication site contains news, meetings, contacts for the exchange of information.

Chemical safety              USA

http://ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/erd


Searchable database of 1500 chemicals including hazard information, toxicology and further information.

Chemical safety            USA
www.indiana.edu:80/~cheminfo
University of Indiana Chemistry Resources worldwide listed - regularly updated

Chemical safety        USA
www.chem.ucla.edu/chempointers.html
University of California chemical information.

Chemical safety          USA

http://psyche.uthct.edu/ous/BiolRes.html


University of Texas Department of Occupational Environment Medicine and Department of Occupational Health web pages cover their latest programs and activities including recycling, Material safety datasheets MSDS, chemical fact sheets, and The Institutional Biosafety Committee Handbook.

Chemical safety           USA
www.siri.org/msds
Vermont Safety Information Resources and Materials Safety Datasheets on the Internet.    

Chemicals: Internet guide    SWITZERLAND
www.chem.unep.ch/irptc/iguide/coverpg.html
United Nations Environment Programme Internet Guide finding information on chemicals.


java

  • Guest
Chemistry resources
« Reply #70 on: September 08, 2003, 04:29:00 AM »

lugh

  • Guest
Spectroscopy Online
« Reply #71 on: September 24, 2003, 03:33:00 AM »
This URL should bee very helpful

http://www.chem.uni-potsdam.de/tools/



:)  ;D  :)

Bee sure to use an anonymizing proxy for serious inquiries, they greet you with your computer host name  ;)


Rhodium

  • Guest
Journal Abbreviation Resources
« Reply #72 on: September 29, 2003, 11:51:00 PM »

Journal Abbreviation Resources

(http://www.lib.purdue.edu/life/j-abbrev.html)

Listed here are resources that will help you decipher the full title of a journal, when you only have the abbreviation for the journal.

java

  • Guest
Another concise chemical info source
« Reply #73 on: October 19, 2003, 02:45:00 AM »

http://www.inchem.org/



There is plenty of source here to try this sub page.......java

http://www.inchem.org/pages/icsc.html




java

  • Guest
Concise OH reaction rates....
« Reply #74 on: October 19, 2003, 10:46:00 PM »

http://www.rcdc.nd.edu%3A80/compilations/Hydroxyl/OH.HTM#Anisole


......see (the copilation of chemical data ) ..browse,

also a very good Chemistry index of much useful material....

http://ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/genchem/



Also visit the wired chemist.....

http://wulfenite.fandm.edu/




Rhodium

  • Guest
Online Applets
« Reply #75 on: November 06, 2003, 04:46:00 PM »
Physicochemical Calculators

http://www.trimen.pl/witek/calculators/calculators.html



Physicochemical Properties of Popular Liquids

http://www.trimen.pl/witek/ciecze/liquids.html


foxy2

  • Guest
DMSO Property Info
« Reply #76 on: February 18, 2004, 07:06:00 PM »
This is a quite useful page about DMSO, they don't get any more comprehensive.
It contains the following:

Pharmaceutical Solubilities
     Pharmaceutical Solubilities Booklet

 Properties
     A Performance Profile of DMSO
     DMSO "Myths"
     DMSO Physical Properties
     DMSO the Truly Great Dipolar Solvent
     The DMSO Anion (Dimsyl Ion)
     Permeability of Commercial Solvents (AM, IND, HYG, Assoc. J.)

 Handling and Recovery of DMSO
     DMSO Handling Information
     DMSO Material Safety Data Sheet
     DMSO Recovery and Environmental Engineering
     Drying of DMSO
 
 Solvent Comparison and Contrast
     DMSO vs. NMP Comparison
     ICH Harmonized Tripartite Guideline

http://www.gaylordchemical.com/products/dmso/applications/pharmaceutical/default.asp


gsus

  • Guest
DMSO properties and uses
« Reply #77 on: March 29, 2004, 04:54:00 AM »
the largest Gaylord bulletin is strangely not on the above page. nothing new here, but lots of DMSO data, and a large number of outlines with refs. recommended reading. they have made me want to buy some, and i will.

http://www.gaylordchemical.com/bulletins/bulletin%20105.pdf



and just in case:


Rhodium

  • Guest
Inustrial Processing Methods (misleading title)
« Reply #78 on: October 03, 2004, 11:21:00 PM »
Unit Operations in Food Processing
R. L. Earle
E-Book:

http://www.nzifst.org.nz/unitoperations/




CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION

Method of studying food process engineering
Basic principles of food process engineering
Dimensions and units
Summary.
Problems.

CHAPTER 2: MATERIAL AND ENERGY BALANCES

Basic principles
Material balances
Energy balances
Summary
Problems

CHAPTER 3: FLUID-FLOW THEORY

Introduction
Fluid statics
Fluid dynamics
Viscosity
Streamline and turbulent flow
Energy losses in flow
Summary

CHAPTER 4: FLUID-FLOW APPLICATIONS

Introduction
Measurement of pressure in a fluid
Measurement of velocity in a fluid
Pumps and fans
Summary

CHAPTER 5: HEAT-TRANSFER THEORY

Introduction
Heat Conduction
Surface-Heat Transfer
Unsteady-State Heat Transfer
Radiation-Heat Transfer      
Convection-Heat Transfer
Overall Heat-Transfer Coefficients
Heat Transfer from Condensing Vapours
Heat Transfer to Boiling Liquids
Summary

CHAPTER 6: HEAT-TRANSFER APPLICATIONS

Introduction
Heat Exchangers
Thermal Processing
Refrigeration, Chilling and Freezing
Summary
Problems

CHAPTER 7: DRYING

Basic Drying Theory
Mass Transfer in Drying
Psychrometry
Equilibrium Moisture Content
Air Drying
Conduction Drying
Drying Equipment
Moisture Loss in Freezers and Chillers
Summary

CHAPTER 8: EVAPORATION

The Single-Effect Evaporator
Multiple-Effect Evaporation
Vapour Recompression
Boiling Point Elevation
Evaporation of Heat-Sensitive Materials
Evaporation Equipment
Summary

CHAPTER 9: CONTACT-EQUILIBRIUM PROCESSES

Introduction
PART 1: THEORY
   Concentrations
   Gas-Liquid Equilibria
   Solid-Liquid Equiibria
   Equilibrium-Concentration Relationships
   Operating Conditions
   Calculation of Separation
PART 2: APPLICATIONS
   Gas Absorption
   Extraction and Washing
   Crystallization
   Membrane Separations
   Distillation
      Steam Distillation
      Vacuum Distillation
      Steam Distillation
      Vacuum Distillation
      Batch Distillation
      Distillation Equipment
Summary

CHAPTER 10: MECHANICAL SEPARATIONS

Introduction
The velocity of particles moving in a fluid
Sedimentation
Centrifugal separations
Filtration
Sieving
Summary.

CHAPTER 11: SIZE REDUCTION

Introduction
Grinding and cutting.
Emulsification
Summary.

CHAPTER 12: MIXING

Introduction
Characteristics of mixtures
Measurement of mixing
Particle mixing
Liquid mixing
Mixing equipment
Summary.

APPENDICES

INDEX TO FIGURES

INDEX TO EXAMPLES

REFERENCES

BIBLIOGRAPHY

USEFUL LINKS


Rhodium

  • Guest
Great Course in Inorganic/Organometallic Chem
« Reply #79 on: October 04, 2004, 11:23:00 AM »
Introduction

Inorganic chemistry covers the whole periodic table and in a way includes organic chemistry as a special case.

Inorganic compounds hold most world records and can display unique physical anc chemical properties, structures, reactivities and bonding situations that are not encountered in organic chemistry. Or, to state it shamelessly honest:
"In inorganic chemistry everything is super"
Prof. W. Beck, Munich, 1986

Course Material/Table of Contents:


Chem 462: Advanced Main Group Chemistry
Michael K. Denk

None

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/CHEM_462/462_chapter_1.html)

None

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/CHEM_462/462_chapter_2.html)

None

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/CHEM_462/462_chapter_3.html)

None

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/CHEM_462/462_chapter_4.html)

None

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/CHEM_462/462_chapter_5.html)

None

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/CHEM_462/462_chapter_6.html)



Course Material/Table of Contents:


CHM 331: Inorganic Chemistry II (Organometallics)
Michael K. Denk

Lecture Notes:

Introduction

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/331/331_Introduction.html)
 
Part I: Main Group Elements

Chapter 1: Organometallic Compounds of Lithium, Sodium and Potassium

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/331/331_Chapter_1.html)

Chapter 2: Organometallic Compounds of Magnesium

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/331/331_Chapter_2.html)

Chapter 3: Organometallic Compounds of Boron and Aluminum

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/331/331_Chapter_3.html)

Chapter 4: Organometallic Compounds of Si, Ge, Sn and Pb

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/331/331_Chapter_4.html)

Chapter 10: Compounds of Phosphorus and Arsenic

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/331/331_Chapter_10.html)

Part II: Transition Metal Chemistry

Chapter 5: Structure and Bonding

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/331/331_chapter_5.htm)

Chapter 6: Carbonyl Complexes & Hydrido Complexes

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/331/331_chapter_6.htm)

Chapter 7; Alkyl Complexes, Carbene Complexes, Carbyne Complexes

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/331/331_chapter_7.htm)

Chapter 8: pi-Complexes

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/331/331_chapter_8.htm)

Chapter 9: Organometallic Compounds of the Copper and Zinc Triads

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/331/331_Chapter_9.html)

Part III:  Lanthanides

Chapter 11: The Lanthanides

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/331/331_Chapter_11.htm)



Example of entertaining "fact boxes" interspersed in the text:


Fulminates

For a fascinating account of fulminates see: F. Kurzer,

J. Chem Ed. 77, 851-857 (2000)

(http://131.104.156.23/Lectures/CHEM_462/462_Literature/fulminate.pdf)

Fulminates have played an important role in the history of chemistry. Although mercury fulinate was possibly already obtained by the Dutch scientist Cornelius Drebbel (1572-1634), the first well documented discovery took place in the laboratory Johannes Kunckel (1630-1703).

The reason for the early discovery of mercury fulminate are due to its ease of formation: mercury or mercury oxide dissolved in nitric acid and then treated with ethanol under heating gives a mercury fulminate, Hg[CNO]2 as voluminous white precipitate. The mechanism of this reaction seems to be obscure.

"I once dissolved silver and mercury together in aqua fortis, and, having added spiritus vini,
set the vessel aside in the stable. When by the next day, its temperature had risen, there occured
such a thunder clap, that the groom thought someone had shot athim through the window, or that the
very devil had appeared in the stable. But I realized that it was my experiment that had exploded."

- Johannes Kunckel (1716)

Mercury fulminate was a crucial ingredient in Alfred Nobel's invention of dynamite (which layed the financial foundation for the Nobel prize). Soaking up nitroglicerine in kieselguhr had removed its shock sensitivity, but also required the introduction of a primer charge. Mercury fulminate worked very well and A. Nobel patented this discovery. It must be noted that mercury fulminate is unsuitable as a bulk explosive due to its high detonation velocity ("brisance" military testing led to gun barrels split in half....).



Example of many useful experimental procedures:


Ethyl 3-aminopropanoate  (5)
Carrie, R., Bull. Chem. Soc. Fr. 815 (1985)



To a 1 M solution of 4 in THF (from the bromo ester with NaN3 in DMSO) was added a molar equivalent of Ph3P, 1.5 equiv of water and a boiling chip (N2 evolution). After 8 h at 200°C and evaporation, the residue was treated with Et2O-hexane and Ph3P=O was filtered. This process was repeated and 5 was distilled at 40-45°C/10.5 mmHg (83%).



Historical footnotes - carbene [ :CH2 ] was first ever mentioned in print in 1944 by D. Duck: