Last year I reminisced on the occasion of the 40th Anniversary of the Macintosh computer.
Last year I reminisced on the occasion of the 40th Anniversary of the Macintosh computer.
In this series of posts about the electronic effects in small sulfur rings I have explored increasingly large induced geometric effects.
The two previous posts, on the topic of anomeric effects in 7-membered sulfur rings illustrated how orbital interactions between the lone pairs in the molecules and S-S bonds produced widely varying S-S bond lengths in the molecules, some are shorter than normal (which is ~2.05Å for e.g. the S8 ring) by ~ 0.1Å and some […]
The monosulfoxide of cyclo-heptasulfur was reported along with cycloheptasulfur itself in 1977, along with the remarks that “The δ modification of S7 contains bonds of widely differing length: this has never been observed before in an unsubstituted molecule.
Way back in 1977, the crystal structure of the sulfur ring S7 was reported.
Back in early 2012, I pondered about the relationships between a science-based blog post and a science-based journal article. This was in part induced by my discovering a blog plugin called Kcite, which allow a journal articles to be appended to the blog in the form of a numbered reference list.
X-ray crystallography is the technique of using the diffraction of x-rays by the electrons in a molecule to determine the positions of all the atoms in that molecule. Quantum theory teaches us that the electrons are to be found in shells around the atomic nuclei.
Starting around 2016, journal publishers started including mandatory “Data Availability” statements as part of research articles; a typical (dated) example is linked here, including guidelines for how to cite the data itself.
Derek Lowe tells the story of “carbyne”, a potential further allotrope of carbon, comprising linear chains of carbon atoms, C-C≡C-C≡C-C. Whether such a molecule can exist on its own has long been the the topic of speculation. Now a report has appeared of a “pseudocarbyne”, stabilised by gold atoms.
This is another in the C&E News list of candidates for the Molecule of the Year, Molecular shuttle in a box
Each year C&E News publishes a list of candidates for the Molecule of the Year.