Postagens de Rogue Scholar

language
QuímicaInglês
Publicados in Corin Wagen

13 C NMR is, generally speaking, a huge waste of time. This isn’t meant to be an attack on carbon NMR as a scientific tool; it’s an excellent technique, and gives structural information that no other methods can. Rather, I take issue with the requirement that the identity of every published compound be verified with a 13 C NMR spectrum. Very few 13 C NMR experiments yield unanticipated results.

QuímicaInglês
Publicados in Henry Rzepa's Blog

The list of molecules of the year is out now at C&E News (but you have to have an account to view the list, unlike previous years). These three caught my eye: Electron in a cube: Synthesis and characterization of perfluorocubane as an electron acceptor ,[cite]10.1126/science.abq0516[/cite]. I have already written about this system and will not discuss it further, except to note this one topped the poll!

QuímicaInglês
Publicados in Corin Wagen

One of the more thought-provoking pieces I read last year was Alex Danco’s post “Why the Canadian Tech Scene Doesn’t Work,” which dissects the structural and institutional factors that make Silicon Valley so much more effective at spawning successful companies than Toronto. I’ll briefly summarize the piece’s key arguments here, connect it to some ideas from Zero to One , and finish by drawing some conclusions for academia.

QuímicaInglês
Publicados in Corin Wagen

An (in)famous code challenge in computer graphics is to write a complete ray tracer small enough to fit onto a business card. I've really enjoyed reading through some of the submissions over the years (e.g. 1, 2, 3, 4), and I've wondered what a chemistry-specific equivalent might be. As a first step in this space—and as a learning exercise for myself as I try to learn C++—I decided to try and write a tiny Lennard–Jones simulation.