Published in Henry Rzepa's Blog

The journal of chemical education can be a fertile source of ideas for undergraduate student experiments. Take this procedure for asymmetric epoxidation of an alkene.[cite]10.1021/ed077p271[/cite] When I first spotted it, I thought not only would it be interesting to do in the lab, but could be extended by incorporating some modern computational aspects as well.

References

Computational Chemistry

Asymmetric epoxidation: a twinned laboratory and molecular modelling experiment

Published
Authors Henry S. Rzepa, Mii Hii, Edward H. Smith

The coupling of a student experiment involving the preparation and use of a catalyst for the asymmetric epoxidation of an alkene with computational simulations of various properties of the resulting epoxide is set out in the form of a software toolbox from which students select appropriate components. At the core of these are the computational spectroscopic tools, whereby a measured spectrum can be interpreted in some detail using theoretical simulations. These include a range of modern chiroptical methods to accompany the increased use of such techniques in modern teaching laboratories. Computational experiments are captured in a Wiki-based electronic laboratory notebook, which features data-stamping, authenticated entries and inclusion of semantically intact data via interactive models rendered within the Wiki using JSmol and its referencing via a digital-object-identifier (DOI) to a digital data repository.