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Henry Rzepa's Blog

Henry Rzepa's Blog
Chemistry with a twist
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Interesting ChemistryAluminum CarrierCarboxylic AcidChiropticalCyanoChemical Sciences
Published

In the first part of the post on this topic, I described how an asymmetric sulfoxide could be prepared as a pure enantiomer using a chiral oxygen transfer reagent. In the second part, we now need to deliver a different group, cyano, to a specific face of the previously prepared sulfoxide-imine.

Interesting ChemistryEnergyFree EnergyNatural ProductSynthetic ChemistChemical Sciences
Published

The assembly of a molecule for a purpose has developed into an art form, one arguably (chemists always argue) that is approaching its 100th birthday (DOI: 10.1002/cber.191104403216) celebrating Willstätter’s report of the synthesis of cyclo-octatetraene. Most would agree it reached its most famous achievement with Woodward’s synthesis of quinine (DOI: 10.1021/ja01221a051) in 1944.

Interesting ChemistryChemical RepositoryGoogleMicrosoftOpendataChemical Sciences
Published

In this previous blog post I wrote about one way in which we have enhanced the journal article. Associated with that enhancement, and also sprinkled liberally throughout this blog, are links to a Digital Repository (if you want to read all about it, see DOI: 10.1021/ci7004737). It is a fairly specific repository for chemistry, with about 5000 entries.

Chemical ITGeneralInteresting ChemistryChairChemical ConnectionsChemical Sciences
Published

Peter Murray-Rust in his blog asks for examples of the Scientific Semantic Web, a topic we have both been banging on about for ten years or more (DOI: 10.1021/ci000406v). What we are seeking of course is an example of how scientific connections have been made using inference logic from semantically rich statements to be found on the Web (ideally connections that might not have previously been spotted by humans, and lie overlooked and unloved in

Chemical ITArchivingJmolWebciteChemical Sciences
Published

Since I have gotten into the habit of quoting some of my posts in other contexts, I have started to also archive them using WebCite. One can quote the resulting archive as: Rzepa, Henry. Quintuple bonds.  2010-04-18. URL:http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/rzepa/blog/?p=1722. Accessed: 2010-04-18. (Archived by WebCite ® at http://www.webcitation.org/5p5BtuzSH) There is one issue though.

GeneralAromatic SystemsHttpMissouriRemi ChauvinChemical Sciences
Published

Some molecules, when you first see them, just intrigue. So it was with carbobenzene, the synthesis of a derivative of which was recently achieved by Remi Chauvin and co-workers (DOI: 10.1002/chem.200601193). Two additional carbon atoms have been inserted into each of the six C-C bonds in benzene. Carbobenzene The structure shows two resonance forms, which remind one of Kekulé and of course benzene itself.

Interesting ChemistryFree EnergyFree Energy BarrierMetal CatalystsNucleotide Synthesizer TechnologiesChemical Sciences
Published

One future vision for chemistry over the next 20 years or so is the concept of having machines into which one dials a molecule , and as if by magic, the required specimen is ejected some time later. This is in some ways an extrapolation of the existing peptide and nucleotide synthesizer technologies and sciences.

HypervalencyBondingELFFluorineHiberty And CoChemical Sciences
Published

In the previous post, I ruminated about how chemists set themselves targets. Thus, having settled on describing regions between two (and sometimes three) atoms as bonds , they added a property of that bond called its order . The race was then on to find molecules which exhibit the highest order between any particular pair of atoms.