Gaussian Basis Set Order Form Extensible computational chemistry Environment Basis Set Database, Version 8/01/01, as developed and distributed by the Molecular Science Computing Facility, Environmental and Molecular Sciences Laboratory which is part of the Pacific Northwest Laboratory. http://www.emsl.pnl.gov/forms/basisform.html
Computational Chemistry If you do not see a shockwave movie below, then you need one or two of the following. RETURN. RETURN. http://www.colby.edu/chemistry/OChem/DEMOS/Comp.html
ECCC9 The 9th Electronic computational chemistry Conference. A free, completely online conference in computational chemistry. March 2003. http://eccc9.cooper.edu/
Paul J. Schupf Computational Chemistry Laboratory In Physical Chemistry, students learn the fundamentals of computational For more information on the computational chemistry Laboratory at Colby contact http://www.colby.edu/chemistry/CompChem/CompChem.html
Extractions: Figure 1 . In sophomore Organic Chemistry students use molecular mechanics to study the shapes of molecules by finding bond lengths and angles from energy minimized structures. Hands-on exercises help students visualize the energetics of the conformations of ring systems. In Physical Chemistry, students learn the fundamentals of computational chemistry. Weekly homework exercises teach the power of molecular mechanics, dynamics, and molecular orbital calculations, Figure 2 . In PChem, students also do laboratory projects that complement the computational exercises to underscore that theory is meant to illuminate experimental observations. The true power of molecular mechanics and dynamics is found in simulation of the motion of molecules in water. These simulations involve solving Newton's equations of motion for many hundreds of atoms, Figure 3 In the Biomolecular Structure course, students use the graphics power of our workstations to understand protein structure, see Figure 1 . The students download structures from the Brookhaven Protein Database. They add hydrogens, determine the minimum energy structure, and study enzyme substrate interactions.
MolySym Develops novel computer interface products to make the manipulation and simulation of molecular systems easy and intuitive. MolySym provides a unified software/hardware package for molecular modeling and computational chemistry. http://www.molysym.com/
WebMO - Computational Chemistry On The WWW Web interface for the quantum chemistry packages MOPAC, Gaussian, and GAMESS. Free version available for download; pro version also available. http://www.webmo.net/
Extractions: Download Recent news WebMO 6.0 is now available for free download! WebMO 6.0 Pro has a variety of additional features and is available for purchase Click here to obtain a free WebMO license. September 20, 2005 What is WebMO? WebMO is a World Wide Web-based interface to computational chemistry packages. WebMO is available for free and can be installed on nearly any unix or Linux system. WebMO Pro is a commercial add-on to the freeware WebMO computational chemistry package. It features a variety of powerful enhancements that are suitable for serious education, commercial, or research-level users. Key Features of WebMO Here are some key features of WebMO: Users draw structures in a 3D java editor, run calculations, and view results, all from their web browser All administrative tasks (user accounts, job time limits, etc) are performed through a web browser interface No software to install on the client. WebMO is installed only on the single web server that runs the computational chemistry programs Simple enough for undergraduate computational chemistry curriculum Flexible enough for computational chemistry research Support for Gaussian 94/98/03, GAMESS, MolPro 2002, and MOPAC 7/93/200x, NWChem 4.6+, QChem 2.1+, and Tinker 4.2+
Welcome To Dr H.Shadnia's Home Page! Dedicated to artificial neural networks and their applications in medical research and computational chemistry. Offers a quick tutorial on theory on ANNs written in Persian. http://ca.geocities.com/shadnia/
Computational Chemistry computational chemistry. Please note Support for this service has been stopped. Use. http//www.chemie.de/. instead. http://www.chemie.fu-berlin.de/chemistry/index/comp/
Extractions: Please note: Support for this service has been stopped. Use http://www.chemie.de/ instead. CACTVS [en] Computational Chemistry Archives Computational Chemistry Center in Erlangen, Research Facilities [en] Computational Chemistry Center in Erlangen, Research Topics [en] ... Chemie.DE Chemistry Internet Information Service (under construction) Searchable Chemistry Index Top Level of Hierarchical Chemistry Index
EMC2 - School Of Chemistry - University Of Nottingham Exploring Modern computational chemistry, 31st July 2nd August, 2002. EMC2 Logo. Organised in association with the Royal Society of Chemistry Theoretical http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/chemistry/emc2/
Extractions: Research Groupings: Introduction Biological and Biomolecular Chemistry Contemporary Organic Synthesis Co-ordination, Organometallic and Supramolecular Chemistry and Catalysis ... Theoretical/Computational Chemistry Theoretical and Computational Chemistry is one of the newest branches of the subject and our Research Unit has quadrupled in size since 1999. Our work lies at the cutting-edge of the field and is regarded highly at the international level. Jonathan Hirst 's group focuses on the application of computational chemistry to biological problems. This field is partly fuelled by the deluge of biological data emerging from genome sequencing. Ongoing projects include studies of the electronic structure of small molecules, the optical properties of proteins, and the application of statistical and computer science methods to problems in drug design and protein sequence analysis. Nick Besley's group work in quantum chemistry. His theoretical work is implemented within the "Q-Chem" software package. His applied work currently includes projects on excited-state
SpringerLink Home - Main Publishes papers in all fields of theoretical chemistry, computational chemistry, and modeling. http://springerlink.metapress.com/app/home/journal.asp?wasp=e2ggvmvwlp12076klqfw
Overview Of Computational Chemistry computational chemistry is simply the application of chemical, mathematical and Some common computer software used for computational chemistry includes http://www.shodor.org/chemviz/overview/ccbasics.html
Extractions: Email the Group ... Chemists have been some of the most active and innovative participants in this rapid expansion of computational science. Computational chemistry is simply the application of chemical, mathematical and computing skills to the solution of interesting chemical problems. It uses computers to generate information such as properties of molecules or simulated experimental results. Some common computer software used for computational chemistry includes: Computational chemistry has become a useful way to investigate materials that are too difficult to find or too expensive to purchase. It also helps chemists make predictions before running the actual experiments so that they can be better prepared for making observations. The Schroedinger equation (explained in another section) is the basis for most of the computational chemistry scientists use. This is because the Schroedinger equation models the atoms and molecules with mathematics. For instance, you can calculate:
JOELib/JOELib2: Home Free Java computational chemistry library with support for file conversion, SMARTS substructure search, QSAR descriptor calculation, and process/filter methods for molecular data sets. http://www-ra.informatik.uni-tuebingen.de/software/joelib/index.html
Extractions: We present two lectures at the ACS meeting ( http://www.chemistry.org ) discussing results for graph mining, data mining and clustering. All results were obtained by using JOELib (some unpublished work), the Weka and Spider machine learning libraries. (1 Comment) [Read More/Comment] Characteristic Polynomials (for weighted graphs) wegner JOELib/JOELib2
Www.shodor.org/compchem/ More results from www.shodor.org computational chemistry @ TCDA general description of computational chemistry and Physics and the courses In the Sophister Years, computational chemistry and Computational Physics http://www.shodor.org/compchem/
Extractions: The Seventh Electronic Computational Chemistry Conference (ECCC7) was held from April 2 through April 30, 2001, entirely on the Internet at http://eccc7.cooper.edu . The conference was hosted by the Chemistry Department , the Computer Center and the School of Engineering of the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art The ECCC's are multidisciplinary and cover all aspects of computational chemistry, biology, and chemical engineering, as well as computational atomic and molecular physics. Participants were able to view articles and discuss them entirely through a web browser. A history of the ECCC is accessible here. The conference discussions are not archived, but the following list of links to offsite presentations has been preserved. Also, authors who subsequently published their work in the Internet Journal of Chemistry have an IJC link placed after the authors' names. Please note that although all abstracts of all presentations were peer-reviewed, only those presentations which were subsequently published in IJC were completely peer-reviewed. The ECCC7 Scientific Organizing Committee consisted of: Robert Topper, Cooper Union (Chair)
The Compton Group - New Home AFM, sonochemistry, fast voltammetry, photochemistry, electroanalysis, and computational chemistry. Click Data Analysis button for access to working curves for various mechanisms online. http://physchem.ox.ac.uk/~rgc/home2.html
Extractions: Sonoelectrochemistry Reactions at the solid/liquid interface are of ubiquitous synthetic, industrial and environmental importance. They typically involve an intriguing sequence of mass transport, adsorption/desorption phenomena, surface diffusion, heterogeneous reaction/electron transfer, chemical transformation of intermediates... The description and interpretation of these processes provides a fascinating challenge in fundamental science. Our task is the development and application of new techniques to investigate the kinetics and mechanism of these reactions. Our research broadly breaks down into nine areas listed here. The navigation bar on the left of the page allow you to list our publications (including books) and to see the scientists in, and collaborating with, the group. Professional electrochemists will find a new Data Analysis Service for steady-state voltammetry. Professor Richard G. Compton Room Temperature Ionic Liquid Electrochemistry Electroanalysis Fast Scan ...
Viewmol An opensource graphical front end for computational chemistry programs such as Gaussian, Gamess, and Mopac. Available for Linux, FreeBSD, Mac OS X, and other Unices. http://viewmol.sourceforge.net/
Extractions: Viewmol is hosted by Overview Getting Viewmol Documentation Examples Screenshots Commercial quality software based on Viewmol, the Materials and Processes Simulations (MAPS) platform, with extended functionality and open interfaces has been developed by Scienomics and is available by contacting info@scienomics.com . MAPS is compatible with Viewmol, for example, with respect to input and output filters. Building and editing of molecules Visualization of the geometry of a molecule as wire frame, stick, ball-and-stick, or CPK models Tracing of a geometry optimization or a MD trajectory Animation of normal vibrations or to show them as arrows Drawing of IR, Raman, and inelastic neutron scattering spectra Drawing of an MO energy level or density of states diagram Drawing of basis functions, molecular orbitals, and electron densities Drawing of properties defined on a grid Display of forces acting on each atom in a certain configuration Calculation of thermodynamic quantities for molecules and reactions between them Drawings generated by Viewmol can be saved as TIFF, PNG, HPGL, or PostScript files
Extractions: Computer modelling of inorganic materials :- Current interests are molecular graphics and computational studies of oxides, sulphides, and complexes; binding of molecules at defect surface sites in relation to catalysis; the interaction of metal complexes with carbon surfaces; crystallisation of biominerals; molecular similarity and receptor-site binding of biological molecules. Physical chemistry :- Modelling of a variety of physical properties of chemical systems is of interest. Various techniques are employed including molecular mechanics, molecular dynamics, Monte Carlo methods and quantum mechanics, using a variety of computer hardware. Meetings/Seminars Academic Staff