995 resultados para Microbiology|Biochemistry|Organic chemistry
Resumo:
Bibliographical foot-notes.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Solid-phase organic chemistry has rapidly expanded in the last decade, and, as a consequence, so has the need for the development of supports that can withstand the extreme conditions required to facilitate some reactions. The authors here prepare a thermally stable, grafted fluoropolymer support (see Figure for an example) in three solvents, and found that the penetration of the graft was greatest in dichloromethane.
Papers Presented At The National Symposium On Bio-Organic Chemistry, Bangalore, July 1982 - Foreword
Resumo:
Woolley's revolutionary proposal that quantum mechanics does not sanction the concept of ''molecular structure'' - which is but only a ''metaphor'' - has fundamental implications for physical organic chemistry. On the one hand, the Uncertainty Principle limits the precision with which transition state structures may be defined; on the other, extension of the structure concept to the transition state may be unviable. Attempts to define transition states have indeed caused controversy. Consequences for molecular recognition, and a mechanistic classification, are also discussed.
Resumo:
The principle of microscopic reversibility is one of the few generalising principles used in organic chemistry which have their roots in the fundamental laws of thermodynamics. It has, therefore, been highly popular. However, although the principle has some important uses, its general application is not without pitfalls. The principle is easy to misunderstand and to misapply: indeed, some of its formulations are semantically dubious. The principle is most dangerous when used as a charm, for it is more subtle than some of its formulations suggest. But above all, the principle may not be used for deducing or disproving the mechanism of a reaction, except when the mechanism in the reverse direction is known independently. For, such use is, perhaps, the deadliest misapplication.
Resumo:
Guía de apoyo para alumnos de educación secundaria de segundo ciclo que sigan la especificación de AQA (Assessment and Qualifications Alliance) en el nivel A2 del área de química. Está dividida en tres secciones: una introducción con consejos y técnicas para la realización del examen; una guía de contenido con los principales conceptos y temas (cinética, equilibrio, ácidos y bases, nomenclatura e isomería en química orgánica, compuestos del grupo carbonilo, química aromática, aminas, aminoácidos, polímeros, análisis y síntesis orgánica y determinación de estructura); y una sección con preguntas de examen y respuestas comentadas por un examinador.