— June 1997 —
Chemical Abstracts
Print, Part 1
Chemical Abstracts Service was founded in 1907 as a division of the American Chemical Society. The first volume contained 15,000 abstracts and was distributed free of charge to ACS members.
Today: about 5,000,000 abstracts per year; annual subscription—over $15,000.
CAS attempts to comprehensively index the chemical literature, including:
An issue each week, but subject coverage alternates, so it is effectively updated every two weeks.
Each volume covers six months; cumulative indexes arrive about two months after the volume ends.
Collective Indexes cover a ten-volume period.
For ease of browsing, abstracts are grouped by subject area
Currently there are 80 subject sections, divided into five broad groups.
Biochemistry and Organic Chemistry used to cmoe out in odd-numbered weeks
Macromolecular Chemistry, Applied Chemistry and Chemical Engineering and Physical, Inorganic and Analytical Chem. used to come in even-numbered weeks.
Cross-references are used where a given abstract might ligitimately appear in more than one section.
Note that subject sections change with time to reflect current research
Subject Coverage Manual gives a detailed definition of each section, and a table of changes over the years.
All CA records contain:
Author’s name appear as given in the original document
Abstracts for journal articles are usually those written by the author
Patent abstracts may be fleshed out by the indexer
Disertations and some other documents have no abstracts
Journal names are listed using CASSI abbreviations
Corporate names are heavily abbreviated
All abstracts use abbreviations for common chemical terms (see handout)
The types of indexing available in CA reflect the constraints of print.
The indexing available in the weekly issues is that which can be done most quickly
The indexing in the Volume and Collective Indexes is more systematic, but still reflects the limitations of print.
All authors are listed by last name and initials only. The index gives only the abstract number. Examples:
Patents have entries for both inventor and assignee; their abstract numbers have P before the number.
Examples:
Other types of corporate authors, such as societies and government agencies, also get author entries:
United States Food and Drug Administration 150996v 150997w
First authors get both the abstract number and title of the paper listed under their names
The author name is not necessarily the form used in the article, but may be a standardized form of the name
Other authors are cross-referenced to the first author of the document
Examples:
Even though CA tries to pull all of an author’s works under one name, it cannot always distinguish authors with the same initials, so it alphabetizes by last name and initials, even where the full name is spelled out!
Examples:
Be aware of special rules for handling certain names. Names with “Mc” or umlauted letters or transliteration from non-Roman alphabets can be tricky.
Example: Mossbauer is listed as Moessbauer
Chemical Abstracts only indexes patents with “new” chemical information and it only indexes the first version of each patent it receives.
However, the patent index (arranged by country code and patent number) gives cross-references from later, equivalent patents.
When searching for an equivalent patent, start at the year of issue of the known patent reference and work forward until you find the equivalent or run out of indexes.
Chemical Abstracts
Print, Part II, Subject Indexing
Weekly issues use keywork indexing assigned by the indexer. Terms are not systematically selected.
Volume and Collective Indexes use systematic indexing for both general concepts and chemical substances.
Keywords are assigned by the indexer based on the body of the document, not just the title of the abstract.
Terms are often abbreviated, following the standard Ca abbreviations
To save space, a keyword is not assigned if it’s part of the section heading for the section the abstract appears in, e.g. “Steroids”.
Additional keywords are listed beneath the main keyword heading to flesh out the concept (like the co-terms in Science Citation Index)
Chemical names are listed along with concept terms in the issue indexes. The chemical names are not systematic, but follow the author’s nomenclature.
“Facile preparations of 4-fluororesorcinol”
The General Subject Index uses standard subject headings in order to better bring related documents together (collation).
The standard headings list does get modified and expanded to reflect new areas of research. Major changes are usually done at the beginning of a Collective Index period.
This index includes:
For extensive subjects, qualifiers are added as part of the main subject heading, such as:
Classes of substances may also have derivative categories, such as:
Note: the following lists of categories apply to pre-1997 indexes. Some are undergoing dramatic changes.
For ketones, aldehydes
For acids
For alcohols
For amines
General: compounds, derivatives, polymers
For substances and classes of substances
For Organs and Tissues
For alloys
The Index Guide is the key printed tool for indentifying the correct subject heading for any topic in Chem. Abs.
Each IG lists the approved headings in use for its period of coverage.
An IG is published at the beginning of each Collective Index period, with updates every 18 months until the final comes with the Collective Index itself.
An alphabetical listing of the approved subject headings, with cross-references to related headings and descriptive notes.
Many common terms not used as headings are listed, with see references to the correct heading.
Many common and / or trade names for chemical substances are listed, giving the correct CA systematic name (and Registry #!)
There are also appendixes on the organization and use of the subject indexes; how CA indexers select headings; CA chemical nomenclature; and a hierarchical list of the headings.
Whenever you are doing a subject search, in print or online, it’s a good idea to check the Index Guide!!
Note: at this point, the first 1997 Index Guide has not appeared, since the first 1997 Volume Indexes have not. See: http://www.cas.org/terms/vocab.html for an interesting compilation of changes.
In general, CA indexers will assign the most specific subject heading that applies to the document.
For example, if a dicument deals with the synthesis of a specific ester, the indexer will assign that substance to the index, not the general term “esters”.
Cancer of the lungs will appear as Lung, neoplasm not Lung, disease (pre-1997). 1997 and later, the geneal term in Lung Tumors, with more specific types, e.g. Lung adrenocarcinomas.
In order to ensure that each substance has a unique possible name, and to group “like” compounds together, CA has devised their own system of nomenclature (not necessarily IUPAC) and scheme for arranging them in the Chemical Substance Index.
Unfortunately, this system can be hideously complex.
Dodecahedrane (C20H20) is listed as:
5,2,1,6,3,4-(2,3)Butanylidenedipentaleno (2,1,6-cde:2',1',6'-gha)pentalene, hexadecahydro
It is important to remember that the CAS nomenclature has changed over time, if you are using the older literature.
The most important change took place in 1972; nomenclature has been fairly stable since then.
CAS indexers select the “main” part of the compound to act as the heading parent.
Substituents to the parent are listed after it is inverted order
What constitutes a parent compound and how it would be named are not always obvious, even to a chemist.
When there are multiple substituents, they are listed in alphabetical order, including the prefixes.
Compounds are listed first by parent compound, with the parent compound itself first (with and qualifiers and categories), then by substituted forms in alphabetical order.
Substituents are read from left to right, ignoring numbers and punctuation.
Benzene
Benzene, analysis
Benzene, uses and miscellaneous
Benzene, compounds
Benzene, polymers
Benzene, azido-
Benzene, chloro-
Benzene, 1,2-dibutyl
Salts of organic acids, or inorganic oxyacids are named as derivatives of the parent acid.
In general, it can be very tricky to look at the structure of a complex compound and decide what the CA name will be.
However, in many cases, you can use a variety of resources to help find the CA name.
If the compound has a common or trade name, check the Index Guide
The Index Guide is especially good fro drugs, natural preducts, dyes, etc.
For other common chemicals, even if you can’t find the specific chemical you want, you may be able to find a similar one and get a clue to follow.
CAS publishes a “handbook” which lists Registry Numbers and gives the CAS systematic name for the substance.
Remember that there are many sources you can use to find Registry Numbers which have good synonym indexes: Merck, HODOC, Aldrich, Kirk-Othmer.
Shelved just after Chem Abs. itself.
While most molecular formulas have a large number of possible compounds, it is far easier to look at a possible name and decide whether it matches your compound than to guess at a name.
Note that the Molecular Formula Index just gives a list of abstract numbers, not a breakdown by subheadings.
Molecular formulas are listed in Hill order.
If carbon is present, it comes first, followed by hydrogen, then all other elements in alphabetical order.
If not, then all (including H) in alphabetical order.
Note that the rules for salts apply to molecular formulas, too.
Benzene is C6H6
Teflon is (C2F4)x
Ferrocene is C10H10Fe
Hydrochloric acid is C1H
Benzoic acid is C7H6O2
Sodium benzoate is C7H6O2, sodium salt…NOT C7H5NaO2
Most compounds with a polycyclic ring system use the name of the ring system as the parent compound.
The Handbook lists ring systems in order of:
Gives structure diagram, name, Reg. #
Even with all of the above, sometimes none of the tools will help you find the correct name.
And if you don’t find something, does it mean that you haven’t guessed the right name, or that it hasn’t been reported?
Enter the power of computer searching — structure searching can give a definitive answer to most questions.