Ciencias QuímicasInglésWordPress

Henry Rzepa's Blog

Henry Rzepa's Blog
Chemistry with a twist
Página de inicioFeed Atom
language
Publicado

Around 1996, journals started publishing what became known as “ESI” or electronic supporting information, alongside the articles themselves, as a mechanism for exposing the data associated with the research being reported and exploiting some of the new opportunities offered by the World Wide Web. From the outset, such ESI was expressed as a paginated Acrobat file, with the Web being merely a convenient document delivery mechanism.

Publicado

In 2023, we very much take for granted that everyone and pretty much everything is online. But it was not always so and when I came across an old plan indicating how the chemistry department at Imperial College was connected in 1989, I was struck by how much has happened in the 34 years since. Nowadays all the infrastructures needed are effectively “built in” to the building when it is constructed and few are even aware of them.

Publicado

Some 13 years ago, I speculated about the longevity of the type of science communication then (and still now) represented by Blogs. I noted one new project called ArchivePress that was looking into providing solutions equivalent to what scientific journals have done for some 350 years of science communication. The link to ArchivePress no longer works, but details of the project can still be found here.

Publicado

The schematic representation of a chemical reaction mechanism is often drawn using a palette of arrows connecting or annotating the various molecular structures involved. These can be selected from a chemical arrows palette, taken for this purpose from the commonly used structure drawing program Chemdraw.

Publicado

Respiratory pigments are metalloproteins that transport O 2 , the best known being the bright red/crimson coloured hemoglobin in human blood. The colour derives from Fe 2+ at the core of a tetraporphyrin ring. But less well known is blue blood , and here the colour derives from an oxyhemocyanin unit based on Cu 1+ (the de-oxy form is colourless) rather than iron.