Tag Archives: IBM

chemistry-news

Chemistry news roundup on ChemWeb

The Alchemist learns this week of analysis fit for a king as British scientists reveal the remains of the most infamous son of York, Richard the Third. In the world of materials, graphitic oxides are shown to behave like water-logged clays at very low temperatures while cutting the mustard could lead to more efficient farming and perhaps new medical approaches to metabolic disorders. A conducting polymer device has been described that could charge up a mobile phone by tapping into your body heat, while a health test for oranges might improve the quality of fruit juice and save trees from dieback. Finally, the Japan Prize is awarded to two ex-IBM scientists for their pioneering work in the 1970s that led to the technique of choice for making so-called silicon chips.

via The Alchemist Newsletter:Feb 14, 2013 — Welcome to ChemWeb.

Slinn Pickings

X marks the spot for miraculous microscopy

  • X marks the spot for miraculous microscopy - Researchers from IBM have succeeded in ‘seeing’ the distribution of charge within a single X-shaped molecule. Taking advantage of the workings of atomic force microscopy (AFM), Fabian Mohn and his colleagues from IBM Research Zurich managed to map the distribution of charge in a molecule of napthalocyanine on a bed of sodium cholride.
  • Chemistry Videos

    IBM chemical dump to boost PubChem

    IBM is contributing a vast chemical data store of 2.4 million compounds to the National Institutes of Health to help accelerate drug discovery. The data has been extracted from 4.7 million patents and the scientific literature of 11 million biomedical journal abstracts from 1976 to 2000 and will be added to PubChem, according to C&EN.

    Some observers have pointed out there will inevitably be much duplication, but others have suggested that redundancy is not a problem. It will be interesting to see whether ChemSpider can scrape this data into its system too.