Author Topic: Professional Chemistry Links  (Read 34794 times)

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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 »