Detroit Pistons’ chemistry must start with Reggie Jackson – Detroit Free Press

Jamie Samuelsen, Special to the Detroit Free Press 12:06 p.m. ET Feb. 28, 2017

The Pistons' Andre Drummond, Reggie Jackson and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope celebrate a basket during the first half of the Pistons' 106-90 win Monday at the Palace.(Photo: Gregory Shamus, Getty Images)

Jamie Samuelsen, co-host ofthe "Jamie and Stoney Show"weekdays from 6-10 a.m.on WXYT-FM (97.1), blogs for freep.com. He also appears regularly on Fox 2.His opinions do not necessarily reflect those of the Detroit Free Press nor its writers. You can reach him at jamsam22@gmail.com, follow him on Twitter@jamiesamuelsen.

Is it easy to pinpoint why the Detroit Pistons haven't taken thenext step this season?

The contrast was tough to miss.

At halftime Sunday night, the Pistons retired Richard Hamiltons No. 32. It was a celebration of the manbut, more so, it was yet another celebration ofthe unique team that won it all in 2004. Coach Larry Brown beamed as he watch. Celebrating Hamilton and Chauncey Billups and Ben Wallace really has been more about celebrating that team. They played, as Brown said many times, the right way." It was a team of outcasts and second chancers who relied on each other. Those Pistons were the ultimate sum-of-its-parts team.

The current Pistons just dont seem to add up. They have talent at each position. They have talent coming off the bench. They have young guys and old guys. They have cornerstone draft picks and some second-chance guys. They have a coach in Stan Van Gundy who has reached the NBA Finals. They have all the pieces. Its just that the pieces dont quite seem tofit together.

Theres no obvious answer. If there were, Van Gundy would have found it by now. Hes a basketball junkie, and Im sure solving this puzzle has been one of the most confounding challenges of his career.

Nobody is suggesting that the Pistons are good enough to battle the Cleveland Cavaliers for the top spot in the East. But I believe they are good enough to be in the top four or five teams in the conference. The biggest problem is that the Pistons have star players who aren'tstars. Andre Drummond was an All-Star last year and earned a$127-million contract extension this summer. Reggie Jackson signed a five-year, $80-million contract in the summer of 2015 thatpays him among the top 10 point guards in the NBA. Kentavious Caldwell-Pope has been the Pistons' best player this season, just in time toget a max offer as a restricted free agent. If the Pistons dont pay him, somebody else will. I really dont want the Pistons to lose Caldwell-Pope,but Im also not sure I want to see more than $60 million next season go to a group of players withe one All-Star Game appearance between them.

The issue is chemistry. Either you have it or you dont. Hamilton and Billups seemed to have it from just about their first game together. Billups was a good shooter and had a knack for the big moment. But the bread and butter of that Pistons offense was Billups hitting Hamilton on a curl at the elbow and Rip dominating the midrange game.

For all the talk about the chemistry between Jackson and Drummond, I think the larger issue might be the chemistry between Jackson and Caldwell-Pope. Both can score. KCP is a better defender. But they dont seem to fit together quite like other guard duos in Pistons history. When you watch Ish Smith playwith Caldwell-Pope and others, there is a better flow. Smith brings the ball up knowing that hes not the primary option. Jackson doesn't.

It has been a difficult year for Jackson, whostartedthe season on the injured list and then struggledto find his game. We assumed last off-season that the Pistons would be better and that Jackson and Drummondwould lead them. Instead, the Pistons are about the same as last season, and its not clear who will lead them. KCP has hit some huge shots. He almost singlehandedly brought them back last week against Charlotte and did his best down the stretch against the Boston Celtics on Sunday night.

If Jackson is going to do his best Russell Westbrook impression and lead the team in points and assists, he has to be better. If hes going to do his best Chris Paul and facilitate others, he has to make that choice. The Pistons are somewhat married to Drummond and Jackson, barring a trade. They appear ready to get into a marriage with Caldwell-Pope, as well. Each player has strengths. Each has flaws. For the system to work, its up to Jackson to identify all of those attributes -- not just in his teammatesbut in himself.

Can he do it? The last few weeks of the regular season will be a good indicator, starting with tonight's game against Portland. The talent is here. Its up to Van Gundy to put the pieces together. And its up to Jackson to make it work.

Detroit Pistons' Ish Smith shows worth of perfect passes

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Detroit Pistons' chemistry must start with Reggie Jackson - Detroit Free Press

Shaka Smart: Texas Needs Better Chemistry To Win & Make Threes … – FOXSports.com

Texas Basketball head coach Shaka Smart says the young Longhorns team is still working on their chemistry this deep into the season.

In Mondays weekly press conference, coach Shaka Smart said some Texas players are still getting to know each other.

This especially affects shooting. The ballhandlers are still learning where their teammates want the ball and where their sweet spots are on the court.

Coach Smarts comments explain why the Horns go long stretches where the offense stagnates and the team loses confidence.

I think our teams chemistry is improving, Smart said before pausing. I think our team like a lot of teams could certainly stand to learn more and more about each other, and about what makes each other tick.

One of the things you hear about veteran teams is Hey, weve played together for a while. We know where this guy likes the ball, or what this guys tendencies are.

I mean, Andrew Jones and Jarrett Allen are just starting to get to know each other. Those are two guys playing better than anyone else on our team. Thats just one example. I think those guys certainly have a better chemistry together than they did two, three months ago.

With the Texas Longhorns near the bottom of the Big 12 at 4-8 in the conference, Shaka Smart is looking for more group effort. He said they do not have an individual leader to run the show, like incoming freshman Matt Coleman could be next year.

So, the game strategy is for all five guys on the court to play together as a unit. But, without that strong team chemistry, the Horns have been inconsistent throughout the year. This is especially the case on the road, where Texas has not won all season.

Coach Smart also spent a lot of time on Monday talking about the teams outside shooting woes, which is the result of the chemistry issue.

Through Saturdays game, the Texas Longhorns arelast in the Big 12 in three-point shooting. Texas is only shooting .296, which is not even close to next-to-last TCU at .340.

Texas is only making 5.7 three-pointers per game, which is nearly one full shot behind next-to-last Oklahoma at 6.5 made threes per game.

Another concerning stat is that Texas is #340 out of all 351 college basketball teams in three-point shooting. Also, Texass 5.7 makes per game ranks #320.

Feb 1, 2017; Austin, TX, USA; Texas Longhorns guard Eric Davis Jr (10) shoots for three to take the lead in the final minute against the Texas Tech Red Raiders during the second half at the Frank Erwin. The Longhorns won 62-58. Mandatory Credit: Brendan Maloney-USA TODAY Sports

Shaka Smart said players have to set up other players, and the shooters need to carry over their technique. But, with an individual mindset, some players lose focus on the task at hand.

The two outside shooters that Smart wants to see become more consistent are Jacob Young and Eric Davis. The freshman Young is a great rhythm shooter in practice, but hes still learning about a different rhythm in live game situations.

Smart emphasized that all the shooters need to shoot the right way, with discipline and confidence. But, for Young, its been a real challenging stretch for him because hes an excellent shooter in controlled environments.

But, until the Texas Longhorns develop a strong team mindset on the court, the team will continue to struggle to shoot and win on the road.

Their next chemistry test is Tuesday night in Norman when they face last-place Oklahoma in a rivalry game. Will the lessons from past road strugglesfinally turn intoa win away from Austin? Coach Smart hopes to see that, plus a few more three-point shots go down.

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Team chemistry has improved 3-point shooting, Kings say – Sacramento Bee


Sacramento Bee
Team chemistry has improved 3-point shooting, Kings say
Sacramento Bee
Guard Darren Collison seemed surprised when told the Kings' 18 3-pointers in a win over the Atlanta Hawks on Friday night set a franchise record. Especially with all the shooters that's been through this organization, Collison said. You think about ...

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Quick: Chemistry Key To Passing Game – Philadelphia Eagles – PhiladelphiaEagles.com

Establishing a consistent passing game at the NFL level is like creating a work of art. Its a mix of different ingredients coming together in the right way to create something special.

In the Eagles offense, timing is key when it comes to the passing game. Some have called Doug Pederson and Frank Reichs offense a West Coast hybrid, and one of the fundamental features of that offense is timing. It needs to be just right, or the finished product doesnt come out the way it was drawn up and mapped out.

How is that timing developed? According to Mike Quick, who played nine seasons with the Eagles and is in the team's Hall of Fame, it all comes down to a quarterback being able to build and improve upon a relationship with his wide receiver. Thats not something that typically happens overnight.

Theyve got to spend time together, Quick said on a recent episode of the Eagle Eye in the Sky podcast with Fran Duffy. To me, thats the bottom line because (Wentz) has to know them. ... Once he has the time to spend with those guys, then the passing game is going to be completely different. That back-shoulder throw is such a big tool now in the NFL. When a guy is taking away from you getting to the up-field shoulder and you have to make the back-shoulder throw, it comes from a lot of repetition and it comes from timing of knowing where to place the ball so your receiver can stop, adjust to the football, and make a play on it. ... All of these things come in time.

In Quicks estimation, an increase in chemistry will only help to add another dimension to the Eagles passing offense. One of the areas where the Eagles struggled in 2016 was in taking deep shots down the field. Bryce Treggs added more of a vertical threat after getting on the field around midseason and Nelson Agholor hauled in a 40-yard touchdown pass in the Week 16 game against New York, but the Eagles never developed a consistent down-the-field passing game.

That could change in 2017, says Quick.

One of the areas where the Eagles need to get better at next year, Fran, is throwing the ball down the field. I was asked about Carson Wentz being a guy whos 6-foot-5 and how he gets a lot of balls batted down. Well, when youre throwing the ball 10 yards down the field the majority of the time, thats going to happen because teams understand that your trajectory is low and its not going to be as high as when youre throwing the ball down the field. They know that theyll have chances to hit the ball.

They have to throw the ball down the field, and Carson has to get used to these guys know their gait, know the timing, know how far he can lead a guy, and just how far he can put a ball out in front of a guy and how he can go and get it. Thats different for all of his guys, and the more he spends time with the guys, the more he understands them, understands how they speed up after they stop or getting off of pressure.

Quick also noted that theres not really a set amount of time that it takes for a quarterback to become adjusted to his group of receivers. For Quick, his big jump came in his second season. He was able to turn things around after catching just 10 passes his rookie year.

Theres no exact answer, Quick explained. Youll start to feel it. Its like a non-verbal communication thing. Youll start to feel it in time with your quarterback and he understands you and you understand him. For me coming into the league, it was as early as my second year working with (Ron) Jaworski. My first year was a strike-shortened year. We took a lot of time in playgrounds and high school fields in the area, just throwing it around and getting to know each other, and it started to click.

When Randall (Cunningham) came in as the quarterback, some years later, it took a little bit longer, but it starts to click at some point. That non-verbal communication sets in and you start to understand the guy. You understand just by his movements what hes going to do, and thats going to happen for these guys.

Shortly after the regular season ended, Howie Roseman expressed how the goal moving forward is to find the right pieces to build around Wentz and help him develop into an elite quarterback. The Eagles will certainly look to upgrade the wide receiver position during this offseason, as they will do with every position group, but Quick believes that the season Wentz spent with some of his returning weapons will be huge for his development moving forward.

I think Jordan (Matthews) has a good relationship with Carson already, and I think the relationship with Zach Ertz is really improving and you could really see that over the last quarter of the 2016 season, that theyre really improving in their relationship and their non-verbal communication, Quick said. Thats going to be key. As he spends more time with these guys, hell start to understand them better.

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One former UCLA champion recognizes current team’s chemistry – Los Angeles Times

Tyus Edney has seen this all before.

The early season victory over highly ranked Kentucky. A feisty sixth man point guard. Freshmen who changed the complexion of the team. A disheartening road loss to Oregon for the first defeat of the season followed by an emotional home triumph over the Ducks.

The onetime dynamo of a point guard would like another similarity to emerge between two of the most enthralling UCLA teams in recent decades: the ending.

The 1994-95 season concluded with Edney and his teammates cutting down the nets inside Seattles Kingdome after winning the national championship. The current Bruins are in the midst of another potentially magical journey, which continues Sunday afternoon against Oregon State at Pauley Pavilion.

Scoring was not an issue for either team, which routinely topped 90 points. They also both thrived in the fun department.

The key with our team was we genuinely enjoyed making plays for each other and helping somebody get a dunk or a layup or anything, getting stops on defense, said Edney, a senior on UCLAs last championship team who returned in 2010 as director of operations. We loved that stuff and it was genuine and we were as close off the court as on the court, and I think thats a quality of this team, just how they get along off the court and it shows on the court.

Like the present team, Edneys Bruins featured a group of last-chance seniors who welcomed freshmen who could help them reach places they could not getalone. Newcomers Toby Bailey, J.R. Henderson and Kris Johnson created a winning blend alongside seniors Edney, Ed OBannon and George Zidek.

Our freshmen coming in elevated our game to another level, Edney said.

The same sentence applies to UCLA freshmen Lonzo Ball, TJ Leaf and Ike Anigbogu, who have provided the support that seniors Bryce Alford and Isaac Hamilton lacked last season on the way to a losing record.

Balance was a trait of both teams. Four Bruins scored at least 20 points in a game last week against Washington for the first time in the programs history since you guessed it Edney and the 1994-95 team did it against George Mason.

His team has a lot of comparisons to this team, Alford said recently. Its almost eerily similar how its been so far.

The first player off the bench on Edneys team was usually Cameron Dollar, a sophomore point guard who has a contemporary counterpart in Aaron Holiday. Dollar saved the Bruins with a gritty performance in the national championship game against Arkansas after a sore wrist limited Edney to less than three minutes.

UCLA lost only two games that season, but the record book shows them finishing 32-1 because a setback against California later became a victory as a result of NCAA violations committed by the Golden Bears. The Bruins beat then-No. 3 Kentucky in late November and rose to No. 1 in the rankings after a victory over Duke in late February.

Their NCAA tournament run is largely remembered for Edneys mad dash with 4.8 seconds left that resulted in a buzzer-beating layup to topple Missouri in the second round. Ball might be even more of a blur.

Hes fast, like I think I was pretty fast, Edney said, but I considered myself an unselfish guard, too, and I enjoyed making plays for our guys and I see that about him, that he really does make people better and he likes making plays for guys and hes smart, hes a good player, he knows how to play the game.

The present-day Bruins like it whenever Edney tells them about the great old days for a program experiencing a 22-year title drought. Alford said he tries to learn something from his predecessor every day.

Hes been a huge part of what were doing so far this year, our success, Alford said, and hes going to continue to kind of be that guide this year for our team and our guys of how we can get to where we want to go.

::

UP NEXT

VS. OREGON STATE

When: 2 p.m., Sunday

Where: Pauley Pavilion.

On the air: TV: FS1; Radio: 570.

Update: UCLA would receivea No. 4 seeding in the NCAA tournaments East Regional if the season ended Saturday, according to a sneak peek of the brackets revealed by the selection committee. Of course, theres a month to go before the only brackets that matter are released. The 10th-ranked Bruins (22-3 overall, 9-3 Pac-12 Conference) probably wont budge from their spot Sunday unless they lose to the Beavers (4-21, 0-12), who have dropped 12 consecutive games and may not get leading scorer Tres Tinkle back this season from the broken right wrist that has sidelined him since late November.

ben.bolch@latimes.com

Twitter: @latbbolch

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One former UCLA champion recognizes current team's chemistry - Los Angeles Times

Newly Created Helium Compound Could Completely Change … – Futurism

Noble Gases

Noble gaseshelium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, and radonhave long been believed to be the least reactive elements on the periodic table. Heliums composition in particular, with its full outer electron shell, makes it theoretically unable to interact with other atoms to form a stable compound. So while other noble gases like xenon, krypton, and radon have successfully reacted to create compounds under extreme pressure, helium has thus far been incapable.

However, despite the assumed impossibility, a team of international scientists has recently created a stable helium-sodium compound.

Chemistry changes when you apply high pressure, and this can be achieved inside our Earth and on different planets like Saturn, said Ivan Popov from Utah State University in an interview with Gizmodo. But this is a book changer.

In previous attempts of pairing helium with other elements, results have always been fleeting. Heliums closed shell configuration makes it difficult, if not downright impossible, for the element bond with other atoms. But this restriction is tied to the assumption that conditions are the same or similar to those on Earths surface. In outer space, its very possible that heliums ability to react is very different given the change in environment.

[E]xtremely high pressure, like that found at Earths core or giant neighbours, completely alters heliums chemistry, adds Utah State researcher, Alex Boldyrev told Phys.org.

To test this theory, the team used a crystal structure predicting computer model in which they could observe how helium would react under extreme pressure. By exposing helium and sodium to atmospheric pressure 1.1 million times more than Earths, they were able to create the compound Na2He.

This compound, along with breaking the rules of Heliums reactivity, it also didnt bond in a typical way. The cubic arrangement of alternating sodium and helium atoms isnt held together by chemical bonds. According to Boldyrev, when we performed chemical bonding analysis of these structures, we found each empty cube actually contained an eight-center, two-electron bond This bond is whats responsible for the stability of this enchanting compound. Helium changes the interaction between sodium atoms so much that if it is removed, the entire structure becomes unstable.

Because it challenges long-standing assumptions about modern chemistry, experts are quick to note that this study has yet to be supported by or replicated in independent experiments that deliver the same, or similar, results. This means that more studies will have to be conducted to fully understand and validate the breakthrough this particular team has uncovered.

This curious discovery implies that there might not be a lot of applications on Earth. Essentially, the results were derived from following altered scientific rules and very extreme conditions, which we wouldnt naturally find on this planet. But environments similar to what was created in this experiment, like the center of gas giant planets like Jupiter and Saturn where helium abounds, provide a context for these reactions that offer insight into how chemistry works on other planets.

It also raises a lot of questions about our understanding of chemistry. Our benchmark for chemical reactions is derived from our knowledge of this world. With the impending possibility of long-term space travel on the horizon, we have to be open to the fact that chemistry as we know it is not always the way that we know it.

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Newly Created Helium Compound Could Completely Change ... - Futurism

Database for chemical reactions updates to improve R&D exchanges – Drug Target Review

The newest version of the Unified Data Model (UDM) project has been released, allowing R&D scientists to access information on compound synthesis and testing.

The latest file format of theUnified Data Model (UDM) has been released by the Pistoria Alliance, a global, not-for-profit organisation. According to the alliance, this update delivers a stable foundation for the collection and exchange of chemical reaction data and empowers the R&D community to move forward with its adoption.

The release is built upon standard (Allotrope-compatible) vocabularies for units of measure and analytical methods, allowing the systems to be interoperable. The alliance emphasises that as increased adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) in R&D continues, industry-wide data standards are essential in the move towards the digitally driven Lab of the Future (LoTF).

The latest update of the UDM seeks primarily to improve the semantics and validation of data. Without alignment on terms and data models, great opportunities to see trends or wider patterns are missed, says the organisation. Standardised harmonisation of data is especially important in this time of increased AI, ML and deep learning use, which are reliant on high quality data to improve outcomes and predictions.

This most recent version has been supported by funding from Biovia, Elsevier, GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), Novartis, Roche and Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS).

The latest update of the UDM seeks primarily to improve the semantics and validation of data

The UDM is exactly the type of essential project the Pistoia Alliance was formed to work on it enables internal and external collaboration and ultimately helps to accelerate innovation and discovery, commented Dr Steve Arlington, President of the Pistoia Alliance. Following this latest update, the project is now shifting into a support phase to help companies adopt the UDM model. Most recently we have secured additional funding from BMS to allow us to continue the project to benefit users and we are pleased to welcome Cynthia Beno from BMS to our steering committee. We are also currently looking for additional funding in order to develop a toolkit which would bring together methods, techniques and literature to support the adoption of the UDM.

At Roche, we are very excited to continue to be involved in the UDM project and we recognise its value to the research community, commented Brian Jones, Principal Scientist of Discovery Informatics at Roche and UDM Project Champion. It is great to have progressed the UDM to this stage and to now move to supporting and promoting the adoption of the model.

Its fantastic to see the UDM continue to develop under the project teams stewardship and to serve the R&D ecosystem. Elsevier donated the original UDM to the Pistoia Alliance and we hope it continues to succeed and promote collaboration in the future, commented Tim Hoctor, Vice President of Professional Services at Elsevier and board member of the Pistoia Alliance.

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Twins are proof that MLB teams once again value character and … – FOXSports.com

The Twins signing of free-agent left-hander Craig Breslow to a minor-league contract on Wednesday hardly qualified as a major move. But the Twins had the same idea when they recently tried to pull off something bigger the addition of free-agent first baseman Mike Napoli.

In each case, the Twins wanted the player not only for what he might contribute on the field, but also what he might add off of it. And while they failed to land Napoli even after offering him more money than the Rangers, according to major-league sources the teams new front office has made it clear that it values the intangible as well as the tangible.

Talent is an aspect of any decision we make, said the Twins chief baseball officer, Derek Falvey. But there is an element of clubhouse chemistry that also plays a role in organization-building. Were going to talk about leadership, makeup and how guys fit in our clubhouse along with how we feel they will perform.

Napoli, according to major-league sources, agreed to a one-year, $8.5 million deal to return to the Rangers, for whom he played in 2011-12 and 15. Familiarity, however, was not his only consideration. The Rangers are more likely to contend than the Twins, and Napoli, 35, has appeared in eight of the last 10 post-seasons, including World Series with three different clubs.

With the Twins, Napoli likely would have alternated with Joe Mauer at first base and designated hitter, helping fill the leadership void that the team experienced when outfielder Torii Hunter retired after the 2015 season.

Falvey recently hired three high-character former Twins Hunter, Michael Cuddyer and LaTroy Hawkins as special assistants to the baseball operations department. Hunter was teammates with Napoli with the Angels from 2008 to 10.

Some de-emphasized chemistry in the early years of the analytics revolution, but that trend appears to be reversing. Both of last years World Series participants the Cubs and Falveys previous employer, the Indians value makeup. Even the Athletics, a team that once was dismissive of chemistry, have talked about giving greater consideration to a players character.

Breslow, a 12-year veteran who has lowered his arm slot in an effort to revive his career, said he took less money from the Twins than other clubs offered because of the chance to lead and help with the teams rebuilding program.

The thing that resonated the most with me was the idea that I could impact the culture and impact the direction of the organization for longer than potentially my stay there might be, Breslow said.

Derek is a really engaging and bright guy with a great vision for the organization. Ive got no doubt that hell be able to be able to bring sustained success. The opportunity to be part of that at this stage of my career is one that is really compelling.

Richard Mackson | USA TODAY Sports

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As the Lakers build chemistry, LeBron James works to keep the temperature down – The Athletic

It really was just one game. The first of 82, against a projected defensive juggernaut and the consensus title favorite. And its not like the Lakers got run off the court in their 112-102 loss to the Clippers on Tuesday.

But one game could very easily become two on Friday against the Utah Jazz, a team expected to contend for a top seed in the Western Conference. And even with a relatively soft early season schedule, two could become more faster than some media and many (most?) fans might have expected.

In this city with this team two superstars, championship expectations, intense scrutiny and a coaching staff constructed to promote palace intrigue (during the game, I couldnt resist my own tongue-in-cheek-but-undeniably trollish Tweet on the Frank Vogel/Jason Kidd dynamic) thats enough to very quickly crank the amps up to 11.

Its why LeBron James wisely went hard on process and context following Tuesdays loss,...

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As the Lakers build chemistry, LeBron James works to keep the temperature down - The Athletic

Chemists Glimpse the Fleeting Transition State of a Reaction for the First Time – SciTechDaily

MIT chemists have devised a way to observe the transition state of the chemical reaction that occurs when vinyl cyanide is broken apart by an ultraviolet laser. Credit: Christine Daniloff, MIT

During a chemical reaction, the molecules involved in the reaction gain energy until they reach a point of no return known as a transition state.

Until now, no one has glimpsed this state, as it lasts for only a few femtoseconds (quadrillionths of a second). However, chemists at MIT, Argonne National Laboratory, and several other institutions have now devised a technique that allows them to determine the structure of the transition state by detailed observation of the products that result from the reaction.

Until now, no one has glimpsed this state, as it lasts for only a few femtoseconds (quadrillionths of a second).

Were looking at the consequences of the event, which have encoded in them the actual structure of the transition state, says Robert Field, the Robert T. Haslam and Bradley Dewey Professor of Chemistry at MIT. Its an indirect measurement, but its among the most direct classes of measurement that have been possible.

Field and his colleagues used millimeter-wave spectroscopy, which can measure the rotational-vibrational energy of reaction product molecules, to determine the structure of the products of the breakdown of vinyl cyanide caused by ultraviolet light. Using this approach, they identified two different transition states for the reaction and found evidence that additional transition states may be involved.

Field is the senior author of the study, which appears this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The lead author is Kirill Prozument, a former MIT postdoc who is now at Argonne National Laboratory.

For any chemical reaction to occur, the reacting molecules must receive an input of energy that enables the activated molecules to reach a transition state, from which the products are formed.

The transition state is a central concept of chemistry, Field says. Everything we think about in reactions really hinges on the structure of the transition state, which we cannot directly observe.

In a paper published in 2015, Field and his colleagues used laser spectroscopy to characterize the transition state for a different type of reaction known as an isomerization, in which a molecule undergoes a change of shape.

In their new study, the researchers explored another style of reaction, using ultraviolet laser radiation to break molecules of vinyl cyanide into acetylene and other products. Then, they used millimeter-wave spectroscopy to observe the vibrational level population distribution of the reaction products a few millionths of a second after the reaction occurred.

Using this technique, the researchers were able to determine nascent populations of molecules in different levels of vibrational energy a measure of how much the atoms of a molecule move relative to each other. Those vibrational energy levels also encode the geometry of the molecules when they were born at the transition state, specifically, how much bending excitation there is in the bond angles between hydrogen, carbon, and nitrogen atoms.

This also allowed the researchers to distinguish between two slightly different products of the reaction hydrogen cyanide (HCN), in which a central carbon atom is bound to hydrogen and nitrogen, and hydrogen isocyanide (HNC), in which nitrogen is the central atom, bound to carbon and hydrogen.

This is the fingerprint of what the structure was during the instant that the molecule was released, Field says. Previous methods of looking at reactions were blind to the vibrational populations, and they were blind to the difference between HCN and HNC.

The researchers found both HCN and HNC, which are produced via different transition states, among the reaction products. This suggests that both of those transition states, which represent different mechanisms of reaction, are in play when vinyl cyanide is broken apart by the ultraviolet laser.

This implies that there are two different mechanisms competing for transition states, and were able to separate the reaction into these different mechanisms, Field says. This is a completely new technique, a new way of going to the heart of what happens in a chemical reaction.

The new technique allows scientists to explore the transition state in a way that has previously not been possible, says Arthur Suits, a professor of chemistry at the University of Missouri.

In this work, the researchers use the powerful new technique of broadband rotational spectroscopy to monitor the nascent vibrational distributions of the products of a photodissociation reaction, thereby gaining deep insight into two different transition states, says Suits, who was not involved in the study. Broadband rotational spectroscopy continues to amaze us with unexpected applications such as this glimpse of the elusive transition, and other exciting advances driven by this technique are no doubt on the way.

The researchers data shows that there are additional reaction mechanisms beyond those two, but more study is needed to determine their transition state structures.

Field and Prozument are now using this technique to study the reaction products of the pyrolytic breakdown of acetone. They also hope to use it to explore how triazine, a six-membered ring of alternating carbon and nitrogen atoms, breaks down into three molecules of HCN, in particular, whether all three products form simultaneously (a triple whammy) or sequentially.

The research was funded by the Department of Energy, the Petroleum Research Fund, and the National Science Foundation. Other authors of the paper include Joshua Baraban PhD 13 of Ben-Gurion University; G. Barratt Park PhD 15 of the Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry; Rachel Shaver SM 13; P. Bryan Changala of the University of Colorado at Boulder; John Muenter of the University of Rochester; Stephen Klippenstein of Argonne National Laboratory; and Vladimir Chernyak of Wayne State University.

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Comic chemistry strains to carry violent, predictable ‘Hitman’s Bodyguard’ – The Herald-Times (subscription)

THE HITMAN'S BODYGUARD 2 stars Ryan Reynolds, Samuel L. Jackson, Gary Oldman, Elodie Yung; R (strong violence and language throughout); in general release

The Hitmans Bodyguard brings Ryan Reynolds and Samuel L. Jackson together in a manic buddy comedy that is heavy on action if a little light and predictable on plot. Its good, but it feels as if it could have been better.

Reynolds plays Michael Bryce, a down-and-out bodyguard who was at the top of the personal-protection world until an unknown assassin took out one of his high-priced clients.

Jackson plays Darius Kincaid, a legendary incarcerated hit man who has been offered a deal to come to the Hague and testify against the human rights violations of an Eastern European dictator named Vladislav Dukhovich (Gary Oldman). Kincaids track record is too bloody to be expunged, but if he cooperates, Interpol has agreed to free his also-imprisoned wife, Sonia (Salma Hayek).

Bryce and Kincaid join forces when a team of Dukhovichs goons attack Kincaids protective convoy, which includes Bryces Interpol-agent ex-girlfriend, Amelia (Elodie Yung, who plays Elektra in Netflixs Daredevil series). Kincaid and Amelia manage to escape the bloodbath and, in desperation, she calls in her ex-boyfriend to deliver Kincaid to the trial, promising to restore his AAA bodyguard status if he cooperates.

Its a simple premise that succeeds largely on the chemistry of Reynolds and Jackson, whose manic dialed-to-11 behavior feels like Seinfelds Frank and Estelle Costanza outfitted with guns and combat training. Bryce and Kincaid have plenty of history and are at each others throats from the outset, united only as a matter of life-and-death necessity.

As you might expect, the Deadpool and Pulp Fiction stars put a lot of R-rated mileage on their odometers, and the one-note gag for Hayeks character is that shes every bit as foulmouthed as her husband. But the best comedy in Hitmans Bodyguard comes organically between Reynolds and Jackson, much more than when director Patrick Hughes relies on profanity to deliver his punchlines.

You would expect a Reynolds-Jackson combo to be heavy on profanity, but for a comedy, Hitmans Bodyguard is also surprisingly violent. Bryce and Kincaid blast their way through a seemingly limitless supply of Dukhovichs henchmen, complete with the expected gunfire and brutality, but other moments such as an early scene where Dukhovich executes a potential witness family mark strange tone changes that feel a step too far for the genre. Other scenes that try to humanize characters like Kincaid also feel odd in context as well.

Hughes really delivers on a sequence of escalating action sequences that match fantastic choreography, camera work and editing to create some genuine adrenaline-pumping exchanges. Combined with the chemistry between the two leads, the action sequences are enough to carry a film that weakens once you look beyond its highlights.

The plot surprises arent that surprising, and at 118 minutes, Hitmans Bodyguard feels a little too long. But fans of Reynolds and Jackson will probably be more than happy to see their favorite actors push each others buttons. Scaling back the more extreme R-rated content and maintaining a more consistent comic tone might have produced a smoother final product. The Hitmans Bodyguard isnt quite as good as it could have been, but for a mid-August release, sometimes good enough is the goal.

The Hitman's Bodybuard is rated R for strong violence and language throughout; running time: 118 minutes.

Joshua Terry is a freelance writer and photographer who also teaches English composition for Weber State University. You can also find him on YouTube.

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Comic chemistry strains to carry violent, predictable 'Hitman's Bodyguard' - The Herald-Times (subscription)

Organic chemistry – Wikipedia

Organic chemistry is a chemistry subdiscipline involving the scientific study of the structure, properties, and reactions of organic compounds and organic materials, i.e., matter in its various forms that contain carbon atoms.[1] Study of structure includes many physical and chemical methods to determine the chemical composition and the chemical constitution of organic compounds and materials. Study of properties includes both physical properties and chemical properties, and uses similar methods as well as methods to evaluate chemical reactivity, with the aim to understand the behavior of the organic matter in its pure form (when possible), but also in solutions, mixtures, and fabricated forms. The study of organic reactions includes probing their scope through use in preparation of target compounds (e.g., natural products, drugs, polymers, etc.) by chemical synthesis, as well as the focused study of the reactivities of individual organic molecules, both in the laboratory and via theoretical (in silico) study.

The range of chemicals studied in organic chemistry include hydrocarbons (compounds containing only carbon and hydrogen), as well as myriad compositions based always on carbon, but also containing other elements,[1][2][3] especially oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, phosphorus (these included in many organic chemicals in biology) and the radiostable elements of the halogens.

In the modern era, the range extends further into the periodic table, with main group elements, including:

In addition, much modern research focuses on organic chemistry involving further organometallics, including the lanthanides, but especially the transition metals; (e.g., zinc, copper, palladium, nickel, cobalt, titanium and chromium)

Line-angle representation

Ball-and-stick representation

Space-filling representation

Finally, organic compounds form the basis of all earthly life and constitute a significant part of human endeavors in chemistry. The bonding patterns open to carbon, with its valence of fourformal single, double, and triple bonds, as well as various structures with delocalized electronsmake the array of organic compounds structurally diverse, and their range of applications enormous. They either form the basis of, or are important constituents of, many commercial products including pharmaceuticals; petrochemicals and products made from them (including lubricants, solvents, etc.); plastics; fuels and explosives; etc. As indicated, the study of organic chemistry overlaps with organometallic chemistry and biochemistry, but also with medicinal chemistry, polymer chemistry, as well as many aspects of materials science.[1]

Before the nineteenth century, chemists generally believed that compounds obtained from living organisms were endowed with a vital force that distinguished them from inorganic compounds. According to the concept of vitalism (vital force theory), organic matter was endowed with a "vital force".[4] During the first half of the nineteenth century, some of the first systematic studies of organic compounds were reported. Around 1816 Michel Chevreul started a study of soaps made from various fats and alkalis. He separated the different acids that, in combination with the alkali, produced the soap. Since these were all individual compounds, he demonstrated that it was possible to make a chemical change in various fats (which traditionally come from organic sources), producing new compounds, without "vital force". In 1828 Friedrich Whler produced the organic chemical urea (carbamide), a constituent of urine, from inorganic starting materials (the salts potassium cyanate and ammonium sulfate), in what is now called the Whler synthesis. Although Whler himself was cautious about claiming he had disproved vitalism, this was the first time a substance thought to be organic was synthesized in the laboratory without biological (organic) starting materials. The event is now generally accepted as indeed disproving the doctrine of vitalism.[5]

In 1856 William Henry Perkin, while trying to manufacture quinine accidentally produced the organic dye now known as Perkin's mauve. His discovery, made widely known through its financial success, greatly increased interest in organic chemistry.[6]

A crucial breakthrough for organic chemistry was the concept of chemical structure, developed independently in 1858 by both Friedrich August Kekul and Archibald Scott Couper.[7] Both researchers suggested that tetravalent carbon atoms could link to each other to form a carbon lattice, and that the detailed patterns of atomic bonding could be discerned by skillful interpretations of appropriate chemical reactions.

The era of the pharmaceutical industry began in the last decade of the 19th century when the manufacturing of acetylsalicylic acidmore commonly referred to as aspirinin Germany was started by Bayer.[8] By 1910 Paul Ehrlich and his laboratory group began developing arsenic-based arsphenamine, (Salvarsan), as the first effective medicinal treatment of syphilis, and thereby initiated the medical practice of chemotherapy. Ehrlich popularized the concepts of "magic bullet" drugs and of systematically improving drug therapies.[9][10] His laboratory made decisive contributions to developing antiserum for diphtheria and standardizing therapeutic serums.[11]

Early examples of organic reactions and applications were often found because of a combination of luck and preparation for unexpected observations. The latter half of the 19th century however witnessed systematic studies of organic compounds. The development of synthetic indigo is illustrative. The production of indigo from plant sources dropped from 19,000 tons in 1897 to 1,000 tons by 1914 thanks to the synthetic methods developed by Adolf von Baeyer. In 2002, 17,000 tons of synthetic indigo were produced from petrochemicals.[13]

In the early part of the 20th century, polymers and enzymes were shown to be large organic molecules, and petroleum was shown to be of biological origin.

The multiple-step synthesis of complex organic compounds is called total synthesis. Total synthesis of complex natural compounds increased in complexity to glucose and terpineol. For example, cholesterol-related compounds have opened ways to synthesize complex human hormones and their modified derivatives. Since the start of the 20th century, complexity of total syntheses has been increased to include molecules of high complexity such as lysergic acid and vitamin B12.[14]

The discovery of petroleum and the development of the petrochemical industry spurred the development of organic chemistry. Converting individual petroleum compounds into different types of compounds by various chemical processes led to organic reactions enabling a broad range of industrial and commercial products including, among (many) others: plastics, synthetic rubber, organic adhesives, and various property-modifying petroleum additives and catalysts.

The majority of chemical compounds occurring in biological organisms are in fact carbon compounds, so the association between organic chemistry and biochemistry is so close that biochemistry might be regarded as in essence a branch of organic chemistry. Although the history of biochemistry might be taken to span some four centuries, fundamental understanding of the field only began to develop in the late 19th century and the actual term biochemistry was coined around the start of 20th century. Research in the field increased throughout the twentieth century, without any indication of slackening in the rate of increase, as may be verified by inspection of abstraction and indexing services such as BIOSIS Previews and Biological Abstracts, which began in the 1920s as a single annual volume, but has grown so drastically that by the end of the 20th century it was only available to the everyday user as an online electronic database.[15]

Since organic compounds often exist as mixtures, a variety of techniques have also been developed to assess purity, especially important being chromatography
techniques such as HPLC and gas chromatography. Traditional methods of separation include distillation, crystallization, and solvent extraction.

Organic compounds were traditionally characterized by a variety of chemical tests, called "wet methods", but such tests have been largely displaced by spectroscopic or other computer-intensive methods of analysis.[16] Listed in approximate order of utility, the chief analytical methods are:

Traditional spectroscopic methods such as infrared spectroscopy, optical rotation, UV/VIS spectroscopy provide relatively nonspecific structural information but remain in use for specific classes of compounds. Traditionally refractive index and density were also important for substance identification.

Physical properties of organic compounds typically of interest include both quantitative and qualitative features. Quantitative information includes melting point, boiling point, and index of refraction. Qualitative properties include odor, consistency, solubility, and color.

Organic compounds typically melt and many boil. In contrast, while inorganic materials generally can be melted, many do not boil, tending instead to degrade. In earlier times, the melting point (m.p.) and boiling point (b.p.) provided crucial information on the purity and identity of organic compounds. The melting and boiling points correlate with the polarity of the molecules and their molecular weight. Some organic compounds, especially symmetrical ones, sublime, that is they evaporate without melting. A well-known example of a sublimable organic compound is para-dichlorobenzene, the odiferous constituent of modern mothballs. Organic compounds are usually not very stable at temperatures above 300C, although some exceptions exist.

Neutral organic compounds tend to be hydrophobic; that is, they are less soluble in water than in organic solvents. Exceptions include organic compounds that contain ionizable (which can be converted in ions) groups as well as low molecular weight alcohols, amines, and carboxylic acids where hydrogen bonding occurs. Organic compounds tend to dissolve in organic solvents. Solvents can be either pure substances like ether or ethyl alcohol, or mixtures, such as the paraffinic solvents such as the various petroleum ethers and white spirits, or the range of pure or mixed aromatic solvents obtained from petroleum or tar fractions by physical separation or by chemical conversion. Solubility in the different solvents depends upon the solvent type and on the functional groups if present in the solution.

Various specialized properties of molecular crystals and organic polymers with conjugated systems are of interest depending on applications, e.g. thermo-mechanical and electro-mechanical such as piezoelectricity, electrical conductivity (see conductive polymers and organic semiconductors), and electro-optical (e.g. non-linear optics) properties. For historical reasons, such properties are mainly the subjects of the areas of polymer science and materials science.

The names of organic compounds are either systematic, following logically from a set of rules, or nonsystematic, following various traditions. Systematic nomenclature is stipulated by specifications from IUPAC. Systematic nomenclature starts with the name for a parent structure within the molecule of interest. This parent name is then modified by prefixes, suffixes, and numbers to unambiguously convey the structure. Given that millions of organic compounds are known, rigorous use of systematic names can be cumbersome. Thus, IUPAC recommendations are more closely followed for simple compounds, but not complex molecules. To use the systematic naming, one must know the structures and names of the parent structures. Parent structures include unsubstituted hydrocarbons, heterocycles, and monofunctionalized derivatives thereof.

Nonsystematic nomenclature is simpler and unambiguous, at least to organic chemists. Nonsystematic names do not indicate the structure of the compound. They are common for complex molecules, which includes most natural products. Thus, the informally named lysergic acid diethylamide is systematically named (6aR,9R)-N,N-diethyl-7-methyl-4,6,6a,7,8,9-hexahydroindolo-[4,3-fg] quinoline-9-carboxamide.

With the increased use of computing, other naming methods have evolved that are intended to be interpreted by machines. Two popular formats are SMILES and InChI.

Organic molecules are described more commonly by drawings or structural formulas, combinations of drawings and chemical symbols. The line-angle formula is simple and unambiguous. In this system, the endpoints and intersections of each line represent one carbon, and hydrogen atoms can either be notated explicitly or assumed to be present as implied by tetravalent carbon. The depiction of organic compounds with drawings is greatly simplified by the fact that carbon in almost all organic compounds has four bonds, nitrogen three, oxygen two, and hydrogen one.

By the year 1880 an explosion in the number of chemical compounds being discovered occurred assisted by new synthetic and analytical techniques. Grignard described the situation as "chaos le plus complet" as due to the lack of convention it was possible to have multiple names for the same compound. This lead to the creation of the Geneva rules in 1892.[17]

The concept of functional groups is central in organic chemistry, both as a means to classify structures and for predicting properties. A functional group is a molecular module, and the reactivity of that functional group is assumed, within limits, to be the same in a variety of molecules. Functional groups can have decisive influence on the chemical and physical properties of organic compounds. Molecules are classified on the basis of their functional groups. Alcohols, for example, all have the subunit C-O-H. All alcohols tend to be somewhat hydrophilic, usually form esters, and usually can be converted to the corresponding halides. Most functional groups feature heteroatoms (atoms other than C and H). Organic compounds are classified according to functional groups, alcohols, carboxylic acids, amines, etc.

The aliphatic hydrocarbons are subdivided into three groups of homologous series according to their state of saturation:

The rest of the group is classed according to the functional groups present. Such compounds can be "straight-chain", branched-chain or cyclic. The degree of branching affects characteristics, such as the octane number or cetane number in petroleum chemistry.

Both saturated (alicyclic) compounds and unsaturated compounds exist as cyclic derivatives. The most stable rings contain five or six carbon atoms, but large rings (macrocycles) and smaller rings are common. The smallest cycloalkane family is the three-membered cyclopropane ((CH2)3). Saturated cyclic compounds contain single bonds only, whereas aromatic rings have an alternating (or conjugated) double bond. Cycloalkanes do not contain multiple bonds, whereas the cycloalkenes and the cycloalkynes do.

Aromatic hydrocarbons contain conjugated double bonds. This means that every carbon atom in the ring is sp2 hybridized, allowing for added stability. The most important example is benzene, the structure of which was formulated by Kekul who first proposed the delocalization or resonance principle for explaining its structure. For "conventional" cyclic compounds, aromaticity is conferred by the presence of 4n + 2 delocalized pi electrons, where n is an integer. Particular instability (antiaromaticity) is conferred by the presence of 4n conjugated pi electrons.

The characteristics of the cyclic hydrocarbons are again altered if heteroatoms are present, which can exist as either substituents attached externally to the ring (exocyclic) or as a member of the ring itself (endocyclic). In the case of the latter, the ring is termed a heterocycle. Pyridine and furan are examples of aromatic heterocycles while piperidine and tetrahydrofuran are the corresponding alicyclic heterocycles. The heteroatom of heterocyclic molecules is ge
nerally oxygen, sulfur, or nitrogen, with the latter being particularly common in biochemical systems.

Heterocycles are commonly found in a wide range of products including aniline dyes and medicines. Additionally, they are prevalent in a wide range of biochemical compounds such as alkaloids, vitamins, steroids, and nucleic acids (e.g. DNA, RNA).

Rings can fuse with other rings on an edge to give polycyclic compounds. The purine nucleoside bases are notable polycyclic aromatic heterocycles. Rings can also fuse on a "corner" such that one atom (almost always carbon) has two bonds going to one ring and two to another. Such compounds are termed spiro and are important in a number of natural products.

One important property of carbon is that it readily forms chains, or networks, that are linked by carbon-carbon (carbon-to-carbon) bonds. The linking process is called polymerization, while the chains, or networks, are called polymers. The source compound is called a monomer.

Two main groups of polymers exist: synthetic polymers and biopolymers. Synthetic polymers are artificially manufactured, and are commonly referred to as industrial polymers.[18] Biopolymers occur within a respectfully natural environment, or without human intervention.

Since the invention of the first synthetic polymer product, bakelite, synthetic polymer products have frequently been invented.[citation needed]

Common synthetic organic polymers are polyethylene (polythene), polypropylene, nylon, teflon (PTFE), polystyrene, polyesters, polymethylmethacrylate (called perspex and plexiglas), and polyvinylchloride (PVC).[citation needed]

Both synthetic and natural rubber are polymers.[citation needed]

Varieties of each synthetic polymer product may exist, for purposes of a specific use. Changing the conditions of polymerization alters the chemical composition of the product and its properties. These alterations include the chain length, or branching, or the tacticity.[citation needed]

With a single monomer as a start, the product is a homopolymer.[citation needed]

Secondary component(s) may be added to create a heteropolymer (co-polymer) and the degree of clustering of the different components can also be controlled.[citation needed]

Physical characteristics, such as hardness, density, mechanical or tensile strength, abrasion resistance, heat resistance, transparency, colour, etc. will depend on the final composition.[citation needed]

Biomolecular chemistry is a major category within organic chemistry which is frequently studied by biochemists. Many complex multi-functional group molecules are important in living organisms. Some are long-chain biopolymers, and these include peptides, DNA, RNA and the polysaccharides such as starches in animals and celluloses in plants. The other main classes are amino acids (monomer building blocks of peptides and proteins), carbohydrates (which includes the polysaccharides), the nucleic acids (which include DNA and RNA as polymers), and the lipids. In addition, animal biochemistry contains many small molecule intermediates which assist in energy production through the Krebs cycle, and produces isoprene, the most common hydrocarbon in animals. Isoprenes in animals form the important steroid structural (cholesterol) and steroid hormone compounds; and in plants form terpenes, terpenoids, some alkaloids, and a class of hydrocarbons called biopolymer polyisoprenoids present in the latex of various species of plants, which is the basis for making rubber.

In pharmacology, an important group of organic compounds is small molecules, also referred to as 'small organic compounds'. In this context, a small molecule is a small organic compound that is biologically active, but is not a polymer. In practice, small molecules have a molar mass less than approximately 1000 g/mol.

Fullerenes and carbon nanotubes, carbon compounds with spheroidal and tubular structures, have stimulated much research into the related field of materials science. The first fullerene was discovered in 1985 by Sir Harold W. Kroto of the United Kingdom and by Richard E. Smalley and Robert F. Curl, Jr., of the United States. Using a laser to vaporize graphite rods in an atmosphere of helium gas, these chemists and their assistants obtained cagelike molecules composed of 60 carbon atoms (C60) joined together by single and double bonds to form a hollow sphere with 12 pentagonal and 20 hexagonal facesa design that resembles a football, or soccer ball. In 1996 the trio was awarded the Nobel Prize for their pioneering efforts. The C60 molecule was named buckminsterfullerene (or, more simply, the buckyball) after the American architect R. Buckminster Fuller, whose geodesic dome is constructed on the same structural principles.

Organic compounds containing bonds of carbon to nitrogen, oxygen and the halogens are not normally grouped separately. Others are sometimes put into major groups within organic chemistry and discussed under titles such as organosulfur chemistry, organometallic chemistry, organophosphorus chemistry and organosilicon chemistry.

Organic reactions are chemical reactions involving organic compounds. Many of these reactions are associated with functional groups. The general theory of these reactions involves careful analysis of such properties as the electron affinity of key atoms, bond strengths and steric hindrance. These factors can determine the relative stability of short-lived reactive intermediates, which usually directly determine the path of the reaction.

The basic reaction types are: addition reactions, elimination reactions, substitution reactions, pericyclic reactions, rearrangement reactions and redox reactions. An example of a common reaction is a substitution reaction written as:

where X is some functional group and Nu is a nucleophile.

The number of possible organic reactions is basically infinite. However, certain general patterns are observed that can be used to describe many common or useful reactions. Each reaction has a stepwise reaction mechanism that explains how it happens in sequencealthough the detailed description of steps is not always clear from a list of reactants alone.

The stepwise course of any given reaction mechanism can be represented using arrow pushing techniques in which curved arrows are used to track the movement of electrons as starting materials transition through intermediates to final products.

Synthetic organic chemistry is an applied science as it borders engineering, the "design, analysis, and/or construction of works for practical purposes". Organic synthesis of a novel compound is a problem solving task, where a synthesis is designed for a target molecule by selecting optimal reactions from optimal starting materials. Complex compounds can have tens of reaction steps that sequentially build the desired molecule. The synthesis proceeds by utilizing the reactivity of the functional groups in the molecule. For example, a carbonyl compound can be used as a nucleophile by converting it into an enolate, or as an electrophile; the combination of the two is called the aldol reaction. Designing practically useful syntheses always requires conducting the actual synthesis in the laboratory. The scientific practice of creating novel synthetic routes for complex molecules is called total synthesis.

Strategies to design a synthesis include retrosynthesis, popularized by E.J. Corey, starts with the target molecule and splices it to pieces according to known reactions. The pieces, or the proposed precursors, receive the same treatment, until available and ideally inexpensive starting materials are reached. Then, the retrosynthesis is written in the opposite direction to give the synthesis. A "synthetic tree" can be constructed, because each compound and also each precursor has multiple syntheses.

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Organic chemistry - Wikipedia

Chemistry, M.S. < Temple University

COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

Learn more about the Master of Science in Chemistry.

The Chemistry graduate program is designed to provide a solid background in the chosen area of specialization. It emphasizes the acquisition of skills that enable students to gain further knowledge in their research and professional careers. For this reason, the Chemistry graduate degree program is research oriented, and seminar attendance and familiarization with the chemical literature are considered integral. The course requirements are comparatively light, although a wide variety of intermediate and advanced courses in related areas are offered. Students are encouraged to take courses in related areas, such as Biology, Computer Science, and Physics, according to their research interests.

Time Limit for Degree Completion: 3 years

Campus Location: Main

Full-Time/Part-Time Status: The degree program can be completed on a full- or part-time basis.

Interdisciplinary Study: A Chemical Physics program is offered jointly with the Department of Physics.

Areas of Specialization: The Department of Chemistry offers programs leading to the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Analytical Chemistry, Biochemistry, Inorganic Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, and Physical Chemistry. Areas of specialization include environmental chemistry, materials and polymers, medicinal, nanoscience, photonics, and surface science. For the master's program, two options are offered:

Job Prospects: The majority of students find employment in the chemical industry. Some go on to academic positions or positions in government laboratories.

Non-Matriculated Student Policy: Non-matriculated students are allowed to take up to 9 credits before admission into a degree program must be sought.

Financing Opportunities: The duties of a Teaching Assistant typically involve leading recitation sections and/or overseeing laboratories, as well as grading lab assignments, tests, and quizzes, when applicable. After their first year, most students are supported by a research assistantship.

Application Deadline:

Fall: December 15; January 1 internationalSpring: September 15; August 1 international

For Fall admissions, priority is given to applications submitted by December 15. Applications submitted after December 15 will be considered on a case-by-case basis for admissions and financial assistance.

Applications for Spring admission should be received by September 15. Note, however, that Spring admission is rare as coursework is designed to start in the Fall.

APPLY ONLINE to this graduate program.

Letters of Reference:Number Required: 3

From Whom: Letters of recommendation should be obtained from faculty or people in industry who are familiar with the academic and/or research aptitude of the candidate.

Bachelor's Degree in Discipline/Related Discipline: A baccalaureate degree is required. Typically, the undergraduate degree has been earned in Chemistry, Biochemistry, or a related field.

Statement of Goals: Include your specific interest in Temple's program; your research goals; your future career goals; and your academic and research achievements.

Standardized Test Scores:GRE: Required. If the applicant's GPA is below 3.25, s/he can be considered for appointment as a Teaching Assistant if her/his percentile scores on the verbal and quantitative portions of the GRE sum to at least 100%.

Applicants who earned their baccalaureate degree from an institution where the language of instruction was other than English, with the exception of those who subsequently earned a masters degree at a U.S. institution, must report scores for a standardized test of English that meet these minimums:

Regardless of score, all international students are required to take a SPEAK test upon arrival at Temple.

Resume: Current resume required.

Transfer Credit: All graduate credits earned by a student prior to matriculation in the Chemistry graduate program are subject to evaluation and approval by the Chemistry Graduate Committee. A "Request for Transfer of Graduate Credit" form, found in TUportal under the Tools tab within University Forms, must be completed. It must be supplemented with an official transcript, sent directly by the Registrar of the institution where the credits were earned. All transfer credits must be "B" or higher and must be from an accredited institution. The maximum number of credits a student may transfer is 6.

General Program Requirements:Number of Credits Required Beyond the Baccalaureate: 30

Required Courses:

Culminating Events:Thesis:The M.S. thesis is the culminating event for the Thesis Track. The thesis should be an original piece of research. Often, but not always, the research described in the M.S. thesis can be published in a peer-reviewed journal. The student coordinates the time for the defense with her/his Graduate Advisory Committee, which is responsible for evaluating the thesis and its defense. No thesis should go to defense unless it is ready for public scrutiny.

Master's Examination:The master's examination is usually the last requirement to be fulfilled by students in the Coursework Track. Its purpose is to demonstrate a breadth and depth of knowledge in the core concepts of Chemistry. The exam is based on the student's major track in Chemistry. Faculty members in the student's track write the questions for the master's exam. The faculty members who write the questions grade the exam. Students schedule the exam though the Graduate Secretary.

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Chemistry, M.S. < Temple University

Kent State chemistry department and patent-holding professor dies – Kent Wired

Students and faculty of the chemistry and biochemistry department at Kent State are grieving the death of researcher and professor Anatoly Khitrin.

Khitrin, 62, passed away due to cancer and heart related problems earlier this week.

Calling hours for Khitrin begin Sunday from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., followed by a service until 5 p.m. at Bissler Funeral Home in Kent.

Khitrins coworkers said it was a pleasure to work with him.

I worked with him for 15 years, and he was such a wonderful man, said Erin Michael-McLaughlin, the chemistry department program coordinator. He had a very dry sense of humor and was one of the most intelligent men I have ever met.

Songping Huang, a chemistry and biochemistry professor, said he worked very closely with Khitrin and cherished the relationship they had.

I remember he once told me this story as to why he shouldnt quit smoking, and it was very funny, Huang said. It was a spanish man decided when he was 113 to stop smoking because he was getting old, and he died two years later. This is why Anatoly wouldnt quit; He was very optimistic and funny.

Huang and Khitrin also hold two patents that Kent State is recognized for.

He was a very smart scientist, and one day I told him of this realization I had with Prussian blue pigment, Huang said. He and I tested this pigment to be used in MRIs instead of toxic metal Gadolinium, and we proved that it worked. Now we share a patent over this discovery.

Robert Twieg, a chemistry and biochemistry professor, knew Khitrin the entire time he worked for Kent State and said he was a friendly and intelligent man.

Khitrin was an expert on nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, Twieg said. People may argue that he was the smartest man in the chemistry department. He understood the quantum universe better than anyone employed in our department. His intelligence and kindness will be missed.

Holli Phillips is the health and wellness reporter. Contact her at hphill10@kent.edu.

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Kent State chemistry department and patent-holding professor dies - Kent Wired

De Soto cross country continues to build chemistry as season quickly approaches – The Dispatch

In Katie Wilber's first year as De Soto's head cross country coach, one of her primary goals was to build the chemistry of the young Wildcats team.

Wilber enjoyed watching the Wildcats drop time throughout last season while continuing to become closer on and off the course. While the Wildcats are eager to kick off their season, they already have a much stronger bond than at this time last year.

Along with logging a multitude of miles this summer, the Wildcats took their first ever team trip to Onekama, Mich.

"We did have a couple of twisted ankles, but overall it was a real good eye-opening experience for the kiddos. The had different terrains to run on and whatnot that they had never seen with being on very flat land here in Kansas," Wilber said. "It was a good team-building time for the kids to just spend some quality time together. We have a very good group of kiddos."

Between the runners on De Soto's boys and girls regional teams last year, the Wildcats only had one senior in Taylor Ramseyer. The Wildcats will have a balance of veterans and underclassmen on both teams this fall.

On the girls side, senior Gabby Collins returns as the Wildcats' lone state qualifier. Wilber is also excited to see the profession of juniors Alyssa Perry and Rylie McDaniel and sophomores Lamyah Ricks, Lane Heilman, Erin Pickert and Justine Wheeler.

"I've seen a lot of people who are now sophomores and juniors really stepping up to the plate and taking leaderships roles even if they've only done it for a year," Wilber said. "They take those freshmen under their wing just as if they were seniors and kind of leading the team. It's really fun to see a young squad because it's a chance for them to work together for a couple of years, not just one year."

The De Soto boys team also has an individual state qualifier returning in junior Sam Hubert. Seniors Andre VanMeerhaeghe and Kason Jackson, juniors Graham Hudelson and Aydan VanMeerhaeghe and sophomore Chase Culver are also expected to contribute after competing on last year's regional team. Wilber has also been encouraged by how the incoming freshmen have blended right in during summer conditioning.

"We've had a good amount of to-be freshmen coming up from middle school that we're really excited about. Some of the boys are keeping up with our varsity guys," Wilber said. "Everyone has been really good about showing up. They go to weights four times a week, so they've been really putting in the time."

With some talented freshmen challenging the returners for some varsity spots, Wilber has been impressed with how all of the runners have set that aside and pushed each other to become the best that they can be.

"Just complete encouragement rather than, 'I want to beat you.' It's very much, 'Hey, keep going," Wilber said. "You can do this,' and just leading by example and walking them through why it is that we're always doing some of these things. Just even telling them what little traditions that we have that are just goofy team traditions like running certain places or what we call them (the routes) and things like that that have just included them as if they've been friends for a long time."

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De Soto cross country continues to build chemistry as season quickly approaches - The Dispatch

Date Lab: Shared philosophies, but what about chemistry? – Washington Post

By Interviews by Michele Langevine leiby By Interviews by Michele Langevine leiby March 9 at 6:00 AM

Interviews by Michele Langevine leiby

Bekah Eichelberger, 23, a nonprofit theater administrator, says that since her last serious relationship ended, she has been open to trying something new. Anna Kark, 24, an international development officer, is polyamorous. The pair share an interest in Marxist theory, activism and Shakespeare. We sent them to the Pub & the People in Bloomingdale to find out whether they could form their own collective.

Anna: I wasnt sure how I was going to be able to find Bekah because when I got the email I actually was uncertain what Bekahs gender would be.

Bekah: She had this really nice, pretty blond hair. When I saw her I was like, Yeah, this is good.

Anna: I asked if she wanted a hug. I think we complimented each other on our respective makeup choices.

Bekah: I hadnt been on a blind date probably in five years. The way it typically works for me on like Tinder or OkCupid ... you set a date. And you also have time to creep on people, right? Stalk them. Thats something we both admitted to doing. This is weird not having the ability to do that. I liked not having that ability.

Anna: One of my favorite parts of the conversation was we both agreed we were going to leave a ridiculously large tip because we both felt strongly about service providers. So that got us talking about capitalism and its inevitable destruction.

Bekah: She does burlesque performance, and Im an actor [and] shes an actor as well. So we do have this slightly nerdy [side]. Literally we were talking about Marxist theory on our date.

Anna: We both like Shakespeare a lot. She is really interested in practical social justice movements. ... She and her friends sent pizza to a bunch of protesters and lawyers at JFK [airport], and I thought that was really cool.

Bekah: I signed up for Date Lab about two weeks after my long-term boyfriend broke up with me. I was emotional and I wanted to get back at him. But this was months ago. I completely forgot I had signed up for it until I got an email. ... That desire to do that to my ex-boyfriend was no longer there, but I still wanted to go for the good time.

Anna: Shes been out with women before and knows that shes attracted to women, and thats great. She just doesnt have a lot of experience with women. ... I date one person right now pretty seriously, and I have other casual relationships. Im not looking to be exclusive.

Bekah: Shes not traditionally monogamous. ... I am more traditional, but I think thats because Ive been told I should be, rather than this is exactly how I want to live my life. Im at that stage where Im experimenting with relationships. Im very open to new things.

Anna: Ive been polyamorous my whole life. Ive only had one monogamous relationship. I think at some point in my life I was sleeping around and then I started sleeping around with more communication and, you know, trying to be very compassionate to people.

Bekah: Something that impressed me about her: She was very confident. She knows what she wants, right? And Im not one of those people. Im working on it, but Im not there yet.

Anna: I really like casual sex or making out with strangers in bars, so it wouldnt make sense for me to be dating someone exclusively. I dont feel like theres some type of arbitrary boundary that dictates what my behavior is supposed to be.

Bekah: I wouldnt say I was head-over-heels attracted, but I definitely thought she was a good-looking person.

Anna: I would say that my type is people who are not intimidated by me. She has a great sense of humor, but she was a little bit intimidated by me.

Bekah: I was a combination of intimidated and curious. When I go on dates, Im physically affectionate if I like [someone]. I want to hold their hand ... play with their hair. And I didnt feel any of that. My attraction was not manifesting itself that way.

Rate the date

Anna: 2 [out of 5]. But a very kind and gentle 2. Ill friend her on Facebook.

Bekah: 2. Wed probably talk more, but theres no romantic connection.

Update

Bekah and Anna became friends on Facebook.

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Date Lab: Shared philosophies, but what about chemistry? - Washington Post

Jets are rebuilding team chemistry — with help from military – ESPN (blog)

Jets coach Todd Bowles and offensive coordinator Johnny Morton, right, keep watch over OTAs.

A look at what's happening around the New York Jets:

1. Team harmony? There are two ways to improve locker room chemistry: Get rid of the bad apples and create a positive, team-first environment. The Jets are attacking the issue from both angles.

In addition to shaking up the roster, coach Todd Bowles is trying to change the culture by exposing the players to outside voices. Guest speakers have addressed the team this offseason, including an Army unit that conducted team-building exercises with the players.

Bowles declined a request to talk about it, and players were hesitant to give away specifics on who and what, but it sounds like the new approach has been well received.

"A lot of times, when somebody from the outside comes in, you're kind of like, 'Man, I don't know,' but everybody he brought in had a good message," cornerback Buster Skrine said. "I think everybody who took part in those workouts and certain meetings really appreciated it, and we learned a lot -- how to be a team, how to lead."

Safety Rontez Miles said, "You see the change from last year. People are really serious about this. We're holding each other accountable, and I'm looking forward to seeing where this goes."

Kudos to the coach for taking steps to eradicate the bad karma that enveloped last season's team.

2. Candid coach: The Jets held their annual town hall last week, drawing more than 100 season-ticket holders to the team facility for a Q&A with Bowles and general manager Mike Maccagnan. It wasn't open to the media, but I got wind of a few things that were said.

Bowles was asked by one fan about the quarterback competition, and he was quite a bit more forthcoming than usual. From what I hear, he left the distinct impression that Josh McCown will be the opening-day starter. Bowles didn't come out and say it, but he told the crowd he has a pretty good idea of how it will turn out. He said McCown has an advantage over Christian Hackenberg and Bryce Petty because of his familiarity with the West Coast offense. But he also noted that he expects Hackenberg to play at some point.

These weren't groundbreaking comments -- Bowles stated what people have been reporting for weeks -- but he gave more context than his usual coachspeak at news conferences.

3. A deal for the ages: The Calvin Pryor-for-Demario Davis swap was a rare player-for-player trade. In fact, it was the Jets' first since they unloaded Wayne Hunter in 2012, according to Randy Lange of the Jets' official website. That's when they exchanged tackles with the St. Louis Rams. The Jets got Jason Smith, the Rams got Hunter.

Maccagnan has made several player trades during his three-year tenure, but the Pryor deal was the first time he dealt away a player. Why were the Jets so hell-bent on unloading him to the Cleveland Browns? It was a combination of factors, on and off the field. His fate probably was sealed when safety Jamal Adams unexpectedly slipped to the Jets with the sixth pick in the draft.

Those in Pryor's camp could point to the following stats, which show the pass defense was significantly better last season when he was on the field ... but apparently not enough to alter the Jets' plans:

4. Scouting report on Johnny Mo: Former Jets coach Eric Mangini held his annual youth football camp Saturday in Hartford, Connecticut, drawing more than 700 campers and dozens of pro and college coaches. One of them was the Jets' new offensive coordinator, Johnny Morton. Mangini and Morton were together for the 2013 and 2014 seasons on the San Francisco 49ers' staff, so Mangini witnessed up close how Johnny Mo -- as his friends call him -- operates.

"Johnny is really smart, really disciplined," Mangini told me. "He's not afraid to be multiple, he's not afraid to attack weaknesses. He's not afraid to use guys in different spots. I always liked that about him: his willingness to try new things. Sometimes that's hard for coaches -- to get out of their comfort zone.

"And he's tough," Mangini continued. "He's going to be demanding of the players. He's going to hold them accountable. I think he's going to be a really good hire."

5. Adjusting the books: The Jets gained $6 million in cap room Friday as Marcus Gilchrist's salary officially came off the books. Because they released the safety last month with the post-June 1 designation, the Jets had to wait until June 2 until his money was cleared. The post-June 1 route allowed them to spread the remaining prorated portion of his bonuses over two years ($1.375 million in each) instead of absorbing the full hit ($2.75 million) this year.

6. Money for nothing: While we're on the subject of the salary cap, it's worth noting that 10 percent of the Jets' total cap is devoted to players no longer on the roster -- about $16 million in "dead" money. They have a $1.14 million charge for Pryor. The biggest charges are Darrelle Revis ($6 million) and Ryan Fitzpatrick ($5 million).

7. Weight watchers: A week ago, I wrote about tight end Austin Seferian-Jenkins and how he dropped 25 pounds since the end of last season. He's not the only player who has lost serious poundage. Miles told me he's down to 200 pounds, a 26-pound loss from last year. He's back to his college weight, and he believes it'll help his movement skills, especially in pass coverage.

8. Help wanted: One position that has fallen between the cracks for the Jets is fullback. Remember the fullback? They didn't carry one last season, as they ran one-back sets out of Chan Gailey's spread offense. Morton will use some two-back sets in his West Coast-based system, and the only fullbacks on the roster are the unproven Julian Howsare and undrafted rookie Anthony Firkser. The Jets flirted with a few in free agency, including former Minnesota Vikings fullback Zach Line (still unsigned). It wouldn't be a surprise if they address it in the near future.

9. OTA observations: Juston Burris is getting a lot of reps; he's working as an outside cornerback in the starting nickel package. He's a player to watch. ... Brandon Shell and Brent Qvale are splitting reps at right tackle. Ben Ijalana continues to hold down left tackle as Kelvin Beachum deals with knee soreness. ... Is there a punt returner in the house? I could list the candidates, but you probably haven't heard of any of them. ... Dylan Donahue, the small-school pass-rusher from West Georgia, worked with the starting nickel package last week. He's relentless. ... Seferian-Jenkins continues to turn heads. ...

10. Calendar: The Jets have one more week of OTAs (four practices), followed by a mandatory minicamp (June 13-15).

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Jets are rebuilding team chemistry -- with help from military - ESPN (blog)

Atlanta student heads to Washington for chemistry competition – Atlanta Journal Constitution

School may be out for the summer, but one Atlanta student is still hitting the books for a chance to win a $12,000 scholarship in a national chemistry contest.

Matthew Propp from The Westminister Schools is one of 42 middle schoolers, selected by the Chemical Educational Foundaton, who will be heading to Washington, D.C., to compete in the 2017 You Be The Chemist Challenge. He was selected from a pool of 55,000 middle school students across 40 states, the nations capital and Puerto Rico.

These 42 students are evidence of what young people can achieve when they are inspired by chemistry. They are our future leaders and innovators. We look forward to hosting them in our nations capital and celebrating their accomplishments,CEF Executive Director Dwayne Sattler said.

The YBTC Challenge, an academic competition that encourages pupils to learn about the importance of chemistry, willhost its final showdown this month in DC. There,scholars will battle through rounds of chemistry questions until someone is crowned the Nation Challenge Champion.

The winner will receive a $12,000 educational scholarship and a TI-84 Plus calculator, 2nd place will receive a $6,000 scholarship, 3rd place a $3,000 scholarship and 4th place a $1,500 scholarship.

Check out the full list of finalistshere.

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Atlanta student heads to Washington for chemistry competition - Atlanta Journal Constitution

The Daily Northwestern : Chemistry Prof. Thomas Meade doubles as … – The Daily Northwestern

Source: McCormick School of Engineering

Thomas Meade

Catherine Kim, Reporter February 22, 2017

When chemistry Prof. Thomas Meade is not conducting research or teaching at Northwestern, he spends his weekends recreating the lives of characters alive during the Civil War with tourists at Gettysburg National Military Park.

Meade joined Northwestern in 2003, focusing on bioinorganic coordination chemistry. In the classroom, hes always keeping students on the edge of anticipation, said Weinberg junior Eleni Varelas, who is part of the Meade Group. The group is a bioinorganic coordination chemistry laboratory led by Meade.

His favorite phrase throughout class is, I want you to be on pins and needles, she said.

But Meade isnt just a scientist. He channels his passion for U.S. history, especially regarding Gettysburg, as an amatuer tour guide. He started working during the summers he spent with his uncle, who lived in Washington, and said he got hooked on the history of Gettysburg, almost to the point of obsession. Looking back, he said it was almost natural for him to cultivate an interest in American history, as his great-great-great uncle Col. Patrick ORorke was killed on Little Round Top, the location of a defensive line during the Battle of Gettysburg.

The three-day Gettysburg tours begin on Fridays. For the rest of the weekend, Meade assigns tourists in his tour a specific soldier who fought in the Civil War battle and leads an interactive narrative of Gettysburgs history. By Sunday, all the characters have died over the course of the tour. Meade said the interactive format of the tours helps bring the history to life.

Chemistry Prof. Thomas OHalloran said Meades most valuable traits are his unexpected sense of humor, often surprising others with witty quips and random acts.

OHalloran, who has been to Gettysburg with Meade twice, said Meade continues to inject elements of surprise into his narrative of Gettysburgs history, just like he does when teaching science at Northwestern.

There are childlike characteristics that we tend to lose as we mature in our field, he said. Tom has kept those and that keeps his teaching and creative approaches very much alive and adapting to the new problems that we face.

Meade is also an inventor with more than 80 patents and is the founder of three different biotech companies Clinical Micro Sensors, PreDx and Ohmx. One of his inventions is a handheld electronic bio sensor for DNA and protein detection, which can detect cystic fibrosis instantly with one finger print.

Even when he was younger, Meade said he was interested in science, especially amateur astronomy. He didnt question if he should go into science he only questioned which discipline to pursue, he said.

Why do I love science? Its is an investigation of the physical world, Meade said. Why I do what I do is for discovery. Thats what jazzes me, excites me. Its the experience of discovery.

Email: [emailprotected] Twitter: @ck_525

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The Daily Northwestern : Chemistry Prof. Thomas Meade doubles as ... - The Daily Northwestern

FVCC grad making waves with chemistry invention – Daily Inter Lake

February 24, 2017 at 8:09 pm | By KATHERYN HOUGHTON Daily Inter Lake

WILLIAM PARDIS uses a pHyter to measure the acidity of water at a lab at Flathead Valley Community College on Friday. (Katheryn Houghton/Daily Inter Lake)

A Flathead Valley Community College graduate has tweaked the designs of a $30,000 chemistry machine to make a similar product for less than $100. Now, hes hoping the tool can get in the hands of citizen scientists across the globe.

Friday afternoon, William Pardis, 22, entered the halls of FVCC less than a year after his graduation. He stood before a small audience crammed into a classroom and talked about a box that fit in the palm of his hand.

We could deploy these to people around the world, Pardis said. With this, citizens could develop maps of [oceanic] pH levels and, together, we could better understand whats happening on a global level.

The instrument called a pHyter measures the oceans acidity, or pH levels. Anyone using the handheld, calibration-free tool can download its readings on their smartphone through an app.

Pardis estimated each of his instruments takes about an hour to make and include 10 parts from a 3D printer. The total cost is about $70, not including labor.

FVCC professor David Long said that while chemists have been able to use pH readers to check the oceans acidification, they hadnt created a product that could go anywhere and be used by anyone.

Theyre about $30,000 a piece, so you can imagine, Oh lets put them everywhere on the planet, Thats not going to happen, Long said.

He said measuring acidity reveals how the planet works, as well as the impact of carbon dioxide emissions. Considering 70 percent of the earth is covered in water, its important to understand, Long said.

I think some people are a little baffled by the idea that in Montana, you would have a project thats studying the ocean, Long said. But we want to have a global perspective in chemistry.

PARDIS BEGAN developing the instrument for a physics class in his final year at FVCC. The goal was for the tool to join nine FVCC students on the Pacific island of Moorea in partnership with a UC Berkeley lab last year to monitor the chemical conditions of the ocean.

Friday afternoon, Pardis showed his audience a photo of the island. A light blue ring surrounded the mountainous land, revealing a reef that acted as the instruments perfect testing ground.

His second day on the island, Pardis and Long took the instrument out to the shores edge and tested it with ocean water for the first time.

The numbers of the open ocean measurements that appeared on his screen matched national trends meaning the machine could compete with instruments used by professionals in the field.

Pardis said since he first began developing the pHyter at FVCC, hes created 26 models of the instrument.

As he continues to fine-tune the design, he hopes someday soon it will be used around the world.

About 70 percent of the coastline is under the jurisdiction of undeveloped countries there isnt long-term studies in the area, Pardis said. These instruments allow the research to be more accessible, to citizens and researchers ... to build a more sustained program to document whats going on in our world.

TODAY, PARDIS is a full-time engineering student at Montana State University. Between classes, he assembles variations of his product and ships them to Sunburst Sensors a world-leading chemical sensors manufacturer based in Missoula.

Sunburst then analyzes his work as they partner to modify the tool.

In the meantime, Pardis is getting requests to ship pHyter off to other research centers throughout the country. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is using Pardis instruments in studies at its marine sanctuary in southern California.

Its an educational tool, he said. Anyone can use one of the instruments, and not only understand the problem better, but be part of the solution.

This summer, Pardis plans to build a freshwater version to test local lakes and rivers.

He said he can make hundreds of the instrument using a 3D printer. But if the pHyters popularity continues to grow, he may have to look for more productive assembly methods.

We know it works, and the market seems to be large, but the next question is, how are we going to meet that [demand], how are we going to produce these things? Im looking into it, Pardis said.

Katheryn Houghton may be reached at 758-4436 or khoughton@dailyinterlake.com.

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FVCC grad making waves with chemistry invention - Daily Inter Lake