Chemistry 435: Literature of Chemistry
Central Connecticut State University, Spring 1996
A. W. Kozlowski
Text: Chemical Information Sources, by Gary Wiggins, 1991.
Grading: Weekly Assignments and Search Reports 65%, Midterm Project 20%,
Final Activity 15%. Regular attendance is expected; more than one absence
will be reflected in grade (makeup may be possible).
Course Schedule
Date |
Subject |
January 24 |
Journals; Introduction to Internet |
January 31 |
Chemical Abstracts — Printed |
February 7 |
Chemical Abstracts, cont.; Intro to CA Online, search strategy |
Feb 14,21,28 |
Online Searching — Dialog |
March 6 |
Other Abstracts and Indexes; Current Awareness |
March 13 |
Government Documents, Patents |
MIDS, SPRING BREAK |
March 27 |
Open; Midterm Project Due Friday, March 31 |
Apr 3,10,17 |
Structure Searching — STN Express |
April 24 |
Beilstein |
May 1 |
Gmelin, Landolt-Bornstein |
May 8 |
Spectra, Numeric Files |
May 15 |
Wrap-up; Final Discussion |
ASSIGNMENT 1: Journals
From A.W Kozlowski, Central Conn. State U., Chemistry 435, Spring 1996
- Inspect the following at Burritt. Write a brief description.
Primary or Secondary?
- Angewandte Chemie Int. Ed.
- Chemische Berichte
- Nature
- Accounts of Chemical Research
- Several journals in your subject area (or for a course you
are taking)
- Use CASSI and Union Catalogs to find where the
following are published, their abbreviation, if they have had any
name changes, and where locally they are available.
- Helvetica Chimica Acta
- Uspekhi Khimmii
- Bulletin of the Chemical Society of Japan
- Recueil des travaux chimiques des Pays-Bas
- Read Chapters 1,4 in Wiggins, and the reprint
Advances in Electronic Publishing in Chem. & Eng. News, June
14, 1993.
- Choose a recent research report from C & EN.
Describe how you would follow up on it and obtain more
information.
- Work with STN Mentor disks on Intro to STN and
Searching by Author. You should be able to operate on IBM-PCs and
Macintoshes. If you have no experience go to computer
certification short course. Work will be done on computers in
Copernicus.
ASSIGNMENT 2: Searching in printed Chemical
Abstracts: Developing search strategies
From A.W Kozlowski, Central Conn. State U., Chemistry 435, Spring 1996
- Read Chapter 5 in Wiggins.
- Prepare two case studies from the list below--one
from Part 1, the other from Part II. You will present one of them
in class so prepare handouts for the class. You will be principal
discussant for the other. AWK will keep a master list of choices--
all topics need to be covered.
Part I:
- What effect does carbon monoxide from aircraft exhaust gases have
on the atmosphere? Use CA Vol. 86.
- You are interested in surveying reactions of amides (but cyclic
and polymeric amides are not of interest). What references are
available in CA Vol. 89?
- Find references in CA Vol. 88 on the synthesis of thienophridines
by the Gould-Jacobs reaction.
- In CA Vol. 80 what references are there on the protein composition
of wheat and how does the use of fertilizers affect the protein
content?
- What references are there in Vol. 88 to the drug therapy of
cardiac arrest?
- Are there references to the handling and cleanup of oil spills?
Try CA Vols. 88 and/or 89.l
Part II:
- Find references in CA Vol. 89 on the use of DOS as a
plasticizer.
- Find references in CA Vol. 88 on the effects of aspirin on the
aggregation of blood platelets.
- In CA Vol. 90 find references on the metabolism of amphetamine.
- Are there reports of studies that link saccharine to cancer in CA
vol. 89?
- What is reported in CA Vol. 86 on the effects of LSD on behavior?
- What are some methods for extracting diethylstilbestrol from
animal liver, kidney, and/or muscle? Use CA vol 82.
MIDTERM PROJECT
From A.W Kozlowski, Central Conn. State U., Chemistry 435, Spring 1996
DUE: Monday, April 1
Assume you are to prepare a one-hour seminar to be presented to faculty
and advanced chemistry students. Obtain enough references to material
available in Burritt Library (or other nearby libraries you are willing to
travel to) to prepare this seminar.
A minimum of 1 recent review and 5 recent primary articles which update
the review are required. Alternatively, 2 reviews and 3 recent primary
articles may be submitted. Recent may be construed to be the last five
years.
If you find a lot of material, you will have to be selective and narrow
down the topic or weed down the papers to the most pertinent. A maximum of
10 articles is acceptable.
Hand in a bibliography with complete references and a photocopy of the
first page of each article. Also write up a description of your search
strategy and its refinements as you go along. Grading will include both
the search techniques and the quality of the submitted bibliography.
Each student will be expected to develop a unique topic. It must be
cleared by AWK by March 13. You may propose your own topic or use or adapt
something from the list below. You will probably have to do some general
research into your topic to become generally familiar with the topic.
- Chemistry of Flavors
- Trace Nutrients in Food
- Platinum Compounds as Anti-Cancer Agents
- Recent Advances in Nitrogen Fixation
- Design of Compounds with Insecticide Activity
- Photochemistry of Double Bonds
- Electroconducting Polymers
- Chemistry in Outer Space
- Synthetic Oxygen Carriers (Blood Substitutes)
- Use of Chiral Lathanide Shift Reagents in NMR
- Biomimetics - Design of Catalysts
- Use of Electrochemistry in Synthesis
- Green Chemistry - Environmentally Benign Processes
INDEXES AND DATABASES
From A.W Kozlowski, Central Conn. State U., Chemistry 435, Spring 1996
- Locate copies of Current Contents: Physical Chemical
and Earth Sciences in the Reference Department of Burritt Library
and find the January issue of J. Am. Chem. Soc. Photocopy.
- Use Applied Science and Technology Index to obtain
less technical references on either:
- the effect of chlorofluorocarbons on ozone in the
atmosphere or
- the use of solar energy for hydrogen production, alternate
energy source, or alternative fuel production.
- Science Citation Index is available at UConn Health
Center (printed and most recent 3 yrs on CR-ROM), UConn Storrs
(CD), and Wesleyan Science Library (paper only). You have located
a reference to Linus Pauling's work on the pleated sheet structure
on proteins in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science,
1953, 39, 255. Is anyone still citing this work? (Citation(s)
needed).
- Use Scisearch on Dialog to determine if CCSU alumnus
Bertrand L. Chenard's 1984 research paper in J. Org. Chem. has
been cited since 1990. The paper deals with annelation reactions
of quinone monoketals.
- If your midterm paper had a review at least 2-3
years old, see what papers cite it. If a midterm is not suitable,
pick any review on bucky ball from attached bibliography.
- Choose an alternative index or database that would
be suitable for your midterm topic and carry out a short search
there.
TOPICS for FINAL DISCUSSION
- A graduate student comes across a 1988 reference in
a textbook in which iron exhibits the +1 oxidation state. This
compound is mentioned as one of a couple of examples of Fe(1).
This is pretty interesting and she thinks this topic might make a
good special project. How can she find out more about Fe(1)
compounds?
- You need to know the systematic name of the substance
congressane in order to find its IR spectrum. Nothing on this
compound is found in the 9th Collective Index to CA. What should
you do now?
- A technology student is working on a project on
hydrogen as fuel. He has taken Chem 111 and wants to include some
recent chemical information on the production of hydrogen. In an
attempt to locate recent articles he looks up hydrogen in the
Keyword indexes of the 1993 issues of Chemical Abstracts. The
first reference he finds is to a review article in a Japanese
journal, the second is to a Dutch patent and a third is to a very
theoretical paper. By now he is totally frustrated. What can you
suggest to help?
- You need NMR spectra of diesters of phosphoric acid
and turn up a reference on their synthesis in An. Quim., 1975, 71,
618-21. Our library does not have this journal. How can you find
out if you want to try to obtain this article. If you do want it,
what options are available?
- A student is going to start an independent study
project on reactions of 0-nitrobenzaldehyde. The compound is
commercially available, but the department is out of money, so he
will have to synthesize it himself. Organic Syntheses lists two
references, one in Vol. III and another in Vol. V. He looks up
the one in Vol. V, where the author A. Kalir reports this
synthesis is an alternate to the one in Vol. III. How can the
student find out if there are any other procedures that might be
better?
- You have been asked if Plexiglass and Lucite are
the same thing. How can you find out?
- In order to finish a p chem lab report on the phase
diagram of tungsten, you need an accurate value of the boiling
point of tungsten. You find this data in two places in the same
handbook and the two values are different. What should you do
now?
- You need to quickly locate a mass spectrum of
tetraethyl tin Sn(C2 H5)4 or at least some information on the
fragmentation patterns. It is not in the NIH/EPA tables. Would it
be better to go to Beilstin or to Gmelin? What are the pros and
cons of each?
- A chemistry major tells you she has been assigned to
prepare Fremyi's salt for next week's lab. How can she find out
what Fremy's salt is, and then where should she look for a
synthesis?
- In the library one afternoon you come across a Chem
111 student browsing through the organic books trying to answer
three questions on types of polymers in order to finish the
advance study assignment of lab that evening. What advice do you
have for him? (His ambition is to be commended!)
- You have physical data on an organic compound but
its identity is unknown. How can you identify it? ex. What
compounds boil between 120 - 130 degrees C. at 1 atm and have a
density of 1.1 - 1.2 g.mL or what substances melt and boil within
- or + 10 degrees of water?