Chemistry professor receives teacher-scholar award The Lafayette – The Lafayette

Professor Mike Bertuccis research may help combat dangerous diseases caused by streptococcus gordonii. (Photo courtesy of Lafayette Communications)

Michael Bertucci, assistant professor of chemistry, was announced as a 2023 Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar for his research alongside his students. Bertucci is one of eight professors from U.S. colleges to be selected for this prestigious award, with the recipients officially announced on Nov. 7.

The award, which highlights professors who commit to the success of undergraduate education, is an unrestricted research grant of $75,000. This is the second nationally recognized award that Bertucci has received after he earned a National Science Foundation (NSF) Career Development Award last year.

I was coming back from giving a seminar, and I got the message on my phone [about the award] I wanted to scream but was surrounded by strangers, Bertucci said. Later, the chemistry department was so supportive. I was really pumped.

The grant will support Bertuccis continued research, but will also create opportunities for all Lafayette student researchers to take part in higher-level research at the college.

The award is certainly going to provide additional opportunities for students to work with Bertucci, chemistry department head Chip Nataro said. But the bigger picture, its not just his students [that will benefit] hell have his funding, then other people in the department will have access to departmental funds that they might not have otherwise. Its gonna benefit students working in all kinds of different labs.

Bertucci and his students primarily study quorum sensing, a bacterial process that examines peptides that can inhibit bacterial communication against a harmful bacteria called Streptococcus gordonii. This bacteria is associated with dental plaques and can cause endocarditis, a life-threatening infection. As a result, Bertuccis research can have potentially life-saving consequences.

A lot of us have [this bacteria] in our mouths, and its okay when its just in our mouths, but if it gets into our bloodstream, its really dangerous, Bertucci said. Were thinking about looking at finding out more about the molecule that controls communication in that bacteria so that we can try to turn it down in cases where it could become potentially harmful.

While the grant will help students research on College Hill, it will also help students travel due to Bertuccis research partnership with University of Nevada.

Bertuccis supportive personality is what helps his researchers have a positive experience in the lab.

Im doing a computational approach to the research where Im looking at the way that the peptides bind in the bacteria on a computer, and thats my own project, Carter Brand 25 said. And so even though its not [Bertuccis] area of expertise, he does allow me to veer into that territory and mentors me there.

In addition to Brand, Allie Campanella 24, Ryann Carlotz 24, Xiaotian Gong 24, Abby Skidmore 24, Mallory Downs 25, Braeden Beal 25 and Alex Yurtola 26 do research with Bertucci.

What I love about my lab is that I feel like [the students] have gotten very comfortable with each other, Bertucci said. It feels like a little family.

Dr. Bertucci has been here a very limited time, but hes had a great impact on the department and brings great energy, Nataro said.

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Chemistry professor receives teacher-scholar award The Lafayette - The Lafayette

NBA Power Rankings – The Nuggets maintain chemistry and the Thunder catch wind in the West – ESPN Australia

We're nearing the end of the NBA's inaugural in-season tournament, with the Western and Eastern semifinals set for Thursday.

But the regular season continues to push along as teams look to wrap up 2023 on a high note and enter the new year swinging.

The Oklahoma City Thunder have made a jump into the top 5 in this week's ranks, led by rookie Chet Holmgren and All-Star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. And as the Western Conference continues to shake up, the Boston Celtics have yet to be dethroned in the East.

The Orlando Magic and Indiana Pacers are not far behind. With Tyrese Haliburton having a breakout season, leading the league in assists (11.9) and second in 3s (4.0). The Pacers will face the Milwaukee Bucks, and the New Orleans Pelicans will face the Los Angeles Lakers to determine who will play in the in-season tournament finals on Saturday in Las Vegas.

Note: Throughout the regular season, our panel (Kendra Andrews, Tim Bontemps, Jamal Collier, Andrew Lopez, Tim MacMahon, Dave McMenamin and Ohm Youngmisuk) is ranking all 30 teams from top to bottom, taking stock of which teams are playing the best basketball and which teams are looking most like title contenders.

Previous rankings: Post-Finals | Nov. 1 | Nov. 8 | Nov. 15 | Nov. 22 | Nov. 29 |

Jump to a team: ATL | BOS | BKN | CHA | CHI | CLE DAL | DEN | DET | GS | HOU | IND LAC | LAL | MEM | MIA | MIL | MIN NO | NY | OKC | ORL | PHI | PHX POR | SAC | SA | TOR | UTAH | WAS

1. Boston Celtics 2023-24 record: 15-5

Boston was the favorite to win the in-season tournament -- only to go down after a hellacious second-half performance from budding superstar Tyrese Haliburton Monday night. Now, the Celtics will spend their next few days licking their wounds until they host the Knicks Friday at home. The one positive thing: Boston, which still tops the East and ranks in the top 10 in both offense and defense, will spend the next couple of weeks at home, before going out West later this month. -- Tim Bontemps

2. Minnesota Timberwolves 2023-24 record: 15-4

The Wolves sit atop the Western Conference with the best record in the NBA, and despite Anthony Edwards missing the past two games with a hip injury, they're on a four-game win streak. Edwards participated in practice the past two days, and coach Chris Finch said he was trending toward playing on Wednesday against San Antonio. Minnesota tops the NBA in defense and ranks No. 4 in net rating, behind just the Celtics, Thunder and Sixers. -- Jamal Collier

3. Denver Nuggets 2023-24 record: 14-7

Previous ranking: 3

Next games: @ LAC (Dec. 6), vs. HOU (Dec. 8), @ ATL (Dec. 11), @ CHI (Dec. 12)

The champs got some much-needed rest after playing five games in seven nights last week, but now they simply need to get healthy. Jamal Murray returned from a hamstring injury that kept him out of 11 straight games only to hurt his ankle against Houston and miss the past two games. Nikola Jokic, on the other hand, has been absolutely dominating in points (29), rebounds (12.8) and assists (9.8). They will need to continue to lean on him as Murray's return is still up in the air, and three of their next four games are on the road. -- Ohm Youngmisuk

4. Oklahoma City Thunder 2023-24 record: 13-6

Oklahoma City is fifth in the league in both offense and defense and is the only team in the NBA to rank in the top five in both. OKC's net rating (plus-8.4) is a tenth of a point behind Boston for league best, while Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has emerged as an early MVP-candidate with the NBA's second-best overall plus-minus (plus-163). -- Tim MacMahon

5. Milwaukee Bucks 2023-24 record: 14-6

The addition of Damian Lillard has transformed the Bucks into the best clutch team in the NBA. Milwaukee has won nine clutch games -- defined as a game with the final five minutes of the fourth quarter or overtime when the score is within five points -- the most in the league, and owns the best net rating in those games. Lillard tops the league in clutch plus-minus, with an absurd plus-41 in 49 minutes. That poise down the stretch led the Bucks to victories over the Heat and Hawks last week and will help them against the Pacers on Thursday. -- Collier

6. Philadelphia 76ers 2023-24 record: 12-7

Philadelphia was one of the big winners among teams left out of the knockout round of the in-season tournament, getting a road game against Washington and a home game against Atlanta. Beyond that, the few days off between Friday's loss in Boston and Wednesday's game in D.C. will allow the 76ers to reset, as both Joel Embiid and Tyrese Maxey will have recovered from being sick last week, and Kelly Oubre Jr. will be back in the lineup for the first time since being in a hit-and-run accident last month. -- Bontemps

7. Phoenix Suns 2023-24 record: 12-9

Kevin Durant and Devin Booker's chemistry is obvious, from the way they complement one another's games in media sessions to their mutual easy, laidback demeanors meshing off the court. Durant is shooting a ridiculous 81% on 3-pointers assisted by Booker -- a big factor in the Suns' eighth-ranked offense. -- Dave McMenamin

8. Orlando Magic 2023-24 record: 14-6

Cole Anthony has settled into his role as the Magic's sixth man and was a key part of their nine-game win streak, scoring in double figures in eight of those contests and at least 20 points in three of his last four. Orlando climbed to a 14-6 record despite getting just five games from Wendell Carter Jr. and Markelle Fultz because of injury. But Anthony and reserve center Mo Wagner (13.0 points per game), have stepped up, and the team hasn't missed a beat. Orlando's bench is averaging a league-best 47.3 points. -- Andrew Lopez

9. New York Knicks 2023-24 record: 12-8

New York was very excited to make the in-season tournament last week when it blew out Charlotte. Its reward: road games in Milwaukee and Boston against the top two teams in the Eastern Conference entering the season. Winding up with 40 home games, and playing about as difficult a pair of opponents as possible, is a tough break for the Knicks, who had a streak of seven wins in nine games snapped with Tuesday's loss to the Bucks. -- Bontemps

10. Indiana Pacers 2023-24 record: 11-8

Indiana continued its undefeated in-season tournament run with an upset victory over the Celtics on Monday to advance to the tournament semifinals in Las Vegas. Tyrese Haliburton led his team with his first career triple -- 26 points, 10 rebounds and 13 assists with zero turnovers -- and is off to one of the best starts in the league. He is averaging 26.9 points, 11.9 assists and shooting 52%; no player in NBA history has put up 25-10 and shot 50% for an entire season. -- Collier

What to know about the NBA's inaugural in-season tournament, including the Dec. 9 final in Las Vegas.

Lakers win NBA Cup, LeBron named tourney MVP MacMahon: How players, fans took in Vegas Lowe: NBA banking on tourney's new court designs Bontemps: FAQ on format, schedule, prize money

11.Sacramento Kings 2023-24 record: 11-8

The Kings' in-season tournament run ended Monday night when they blew an early lead to the Pelicans and could never recove
r, but overall they're picking up nice wins -- particularly against the Wolves and Nuggets -- putting them at fifth in a competitive Western Conference. Their consistency on both ends of the floor is still an issue. When they win, they look like they could beat anyone. But when they lose, it's a completely different team. -- Kendra Andrews

12. Miami Heat 2023-24 record: 11-9

Jimmy Butler highlighted his return from a two-game absence with back-to-back 30-point games against the Pacers last week. Miami is at its best when Butler is getting to the free throw line; he was 18-of-20 on Saturday. The Heat are 3-0 this season when Butler attempts at least 10 free throws and were 16-8 when Butler attempted 10 shots from the stripe last season. -- Lopez

13. Dallas Mavericks 2023-24 record: 11-8

Previous ranking: 9

Next games: vs. UTAH (Dec. 6), @ POR (Dec. 8), @ MEM (Dec. 11), vs. LAL (Dec. 12)

Forward Grant Williams, the Mavs' most significant free agency addition, is mired in a slump after a sizzling shooting start to his Dallas tenure. After shooting 48% on 3s in the first 13 games, Williams is 7-of-31 (22.6%) from long range in the last six games, four of which were losses. The three days off before Wednesday's home game against the Jazz might help. Williams is a full-time starter for the first time in his career, and his 28.8 minutes per game are a career high. -- MacMahon

14. New Orleans Pelicans 2023-24 record: 12-10

In the Pelicans' in-season tournament quarterfinals victory over the Kings, Herbert Jones had his first career 20-point, five-assists, five-rebound game. When Jones contributes on offense, the Pelicans are at their best. New Orleans is 5-1 this year when Jones scores at least 15 points, and in an offense with Zion Williamson, Brandon Ingram, CJ McCollum and the returning Trey Murphy III, any offense Jones brings is a huge bonus for New Orleans. -- Lopez

15. Los Angeles Lakers 2023-24 record: 13-9

LeBron James led the Lakers past the Suns on Tuesday with 15 of his 31 points in the fourth quarter to punch his team's ticket to Las Vegas for the in-season tournament semifinals against the Pelicans. "I want to continue to defy the odds, continue to have this battle with Father Time that for so long has, everybody said has, been undefeated," James said of his production in his 21st season. "So, I'm trying to give him one loss." -- McMenamin

16. Brooklyn Nets 2023-24 record: 10-9

Brooklyn has managed to hang around in the Eastern Conference playoff picture thanks to one of the more bizarre stats in the NBA this season: leading the league in rebounds per game with 48.2 boards per contest. The Nets were 29th last season; Nic Claxton and Ben Simmons have both missed large chunks of the season; and Brooklyn is known for playing small, switchable lineups. But Nets coach Jacque Vaughn said improvement on the glass was a priority coming into the season, and so far it's been one of the biggest turnarounds in any one single stat in the league. -- Bontemps

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17. Cleveland Cavaliers 2023-24 record: 11-9

Previous ranking: 17

Next games: vs. ORL (Dec. 6), @ MIA (Dec. 8), @ ORL (Dec. 11), @ BOS (Dec. 12)

It's time to talk about the Cavs' offense. Or lack thereof. While Cleveland has built a sturdy defense in the last few seasons under coach J.B. Bickerstaff -- it's currently 8th in defense -- the scoring has sputtered. This season, the Cavaliers are 25th in points per game and 23rd in offensive efficiency. Donovan Mitchell is averaging 27.1 points, but he won't be able to carry the Cavs alone. They're set to play top-10 defenses in the Celtics and Magic, each twice in the next five games. -- McMenamin

18. LA Clippers 2023-24 record: 9-10

Previous ranking: 21

Next games: vs. DEN (Dec. 6), @ UTAH (Dec. 8), vs. POR (Dec. 11), vs. SAC (Dec. 12)

The Clippers continue to ride the roller coaster they have been on since the James Harden trade. After suffering their worst loss of the season to a Nuggets team without Nikola Jokic, Jamal Murray and Aaron Gordon last Monday, they rebounded with a win at Sacramento that provided Ty Lue with what he called "the blueprint" for how the Clippers need to play. It was during that 131-117 win against the Kings that Harden, Kawhi Leonard and Paul George all took turns attacking the defense with balanced shot distribution. The next night, they lost at Golden State but returned home and overcame a 22-point deficit last Saturday topped by George's game-winning 3 with 9.2 seconds left to stun the Warriors. The Clippers had a much-needed three-day break before they take on the defending champs at home on Wednesday and start a tough 10-game stretch. -- Youngmisuk

19. Golden State Warriors 2023-24 record: 9-11

It's hard to get excited about the product the Warriors are putting on the court. After blowing a 24-point lead to the Kings last Tuesday, they bounced back with a close win against the Clippers, only to drop the next game against them, blowing a 22-point lead and giving up the 3-point game winner with 9.2 seconds left. With Chris Paul's return up in the air, they need Stephen Curry to work miracles. As incredible as he is and as much magic as he can produce, he needs help -- ASAP. -- Andrews

20. Houston Rockets 2023-24 record: 8-9

The Rockets remain the league's only team that is winless on the road. Houston is 0-8 in away games, matching the second-longest road losing streak to start a season in franchise history. Only the 2021-22 team started with a longer road losing streak (11 games), according to ESPN Stats & Information research. The primary road problem: The Rockets' defense hasn't traveled. Houston is allowing 118.8 points per 100 possessions on the road and only 102.1 at home, where Houston is 8-1. -- MacMahon

21. Atlanta Hawks 2023-24 record: 9-10

There have been signs of growth in Trae Young's game on both sides of the floor. He's averaging a career-high 10.7 assists and his turnovers are down -- a category he has led the NBA in the past two years. His turnover percentage (13.7%) is the lowest of his career, and Young is averaging a career-best 1.6 steals. Still, the Hawks remain firmly in the play-in race, with a difficult two-week stretch coming up. -- Lopez

22. Toronto Raptors 2023-24 record: 9-11

Dennis Schroder summed up the state of the Raptors on Tuesday when he told reporters in Toronto, "The next 20 games are going to show who we really are. The next 20 games are going to be really important to the team." For a group that needs to choose a direction, and is already sitting outside of the play-in mix in the East, this felt like an admission that the Raptors need to start improving or changes could be coming. -- Bontemps

23. Utah Jazz 2023-24 record: 7-13

There is some optimism All-Star forward Lauri Markkanen could return from his hamstring injury this week, but the Jazz have managed to go 3-2 in the five games that Markkanen has missed. Simone Fontecchio averaged 11.8 points, 4.2 rebounds and 3.2 assists during that span and often defended the opponent's best wing scorer. Fontecchio is a rare true wing on a Jazz roster that is heavy with combo guards
and big men. Could Fontecchio stick in the starting lineup, allowing the 7-foot Markkanen to play his natural power forward position? That would mean moving John Collins, an established veteran who is playing well, to a sixth man role. -- MacMahon

24. Chicago Bulls 2023-24 record: 7-14

The Bulls have won back-to-back games for the first time all season against the Bucks and Pelicans. Despite missing guard Zach LaVine, the Bulls put up two of their best performances of the year, recording a season-high 32 assists in each game, sparking an offensive flow that's lacked. The Bulls will look to extend their win streak as they take on the lowly Hornets and Spurs next, and lean on DeMar DeRozan (21.5 PPG) and Nikola Vucevic (10 RPG) with LaVine expecting to miss the next two games with a foot injury. -- Collier

25. Charlotte Hornets 2023-24 record: 6-12

The positive: Charlotte had an encouraging 129-128 win at Brooklyn without the injured LaMelo Ball last week, and were up four with under five minutes left against a surging Minnesota on Saturday. Terry Rozier is picking up the slack with Ball sidelined. He had 37 points and 13 assists in the win over the Nets and 23 points, 7 assists and 6 rebounds against the Wolves. Miles Bridges also has provided a boost, averaging 20.5 points and seven rebounds since his return from suspension. The not-so-positive? They sit 12th in the East and now rank dead last in defense. -- Youngmisuk

26. Portland Trail Blazers 2023-24 record: 6-13

The good news for the Trail Blazers is that their young players remain intriguing. Shaedon Sharpe combined for 54 points over two games, and Scoot Henderson scored a career-high 17 in 21 minutes Sunday. Their defense has improved to 10th in the league, and while most of their wins have been against bottom-tier offensives, their win over Indiana should give them confidence that their defensive strategy is working. -- Andrews

Friday, Dec. 15 Lakers at Spurs, 7:30 p.m. Knicks at Suns, 10 p.m.

All times Eastern

27. Memphis Grizzlies 2023-24 record: 5-14

Among a Grizzlies team riddled with injury, Desmond Bane is averaging career highs of 23.8 points and 5.2 assists per game. His efficiency has dipped -- his true shooting percentage is a career-low 57.3% -- as he's dealt with being the focus of the defense during Ja Morant's suspension, which will end in six games. Bane believes this experience has been beneficial for his development. "When he comes back, obviously he's going to be the head of attention and that'll take some stress off of me," Bane told ESPN. "But if for some reason defenses do throw out different coverages, I'll be prepared." -- MacMahon

28. San Antonio Spurs 2023-24 record: 3-16

For the second consecutive season, the Spurs are on the verge of setting a franchise record for most consecutive losses. During the 2022-23 season, the Spurs lost a record 16 straight games dating from Jan. 20 to Feb. 28. After a loss to New Orleans on Friday, this year's version of the Spurs has lost 14 in a row. But it'll be a tough mark to avoid as they'll have to get by either the team with the best record in the Western Conference (Minnesota) or defeat former Spur DeMar DeRozan and the Chicago Bulls on Friday at home. -- Lopez

29. Washington Wizards 2023-24 record: 3-16

It's only December but Kyle Kuzma has already seen enough to know what will likely ail the Wizards all season. "We can't guard a stop sign," Kuzma told The Athletic. Washington has lost 11 of the last 12 games and has allowed 130 points in eight of those games. After ending a nine-game slide with a win over a struggling Detroit last Monday, the Wizards could be staring at another lengthy losing streak. Following consecutive losses at Orlando, Washington plays the Sixers at home before traveling to Brooklyn and Philadelphia. -- Youngmisuk

30. Detroit Pistons 2023-24 record: 2-18

The Pistons' losing streak has extended to 17 games. After a close loss to the Cavaliers on Saturday. Detroit left November winless, making it the first team since the 2015 Process-era Sixers to hit such a mark. The Pistons' best chance at snapping this streak will be their next game, against Memphis (5-14), before a stretch that includes Orlando, Indiana, Philadelphia (twice) and Milwaukee. -- Collier

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NBA Power Rankings - The Nuggets maintain chemistry and the Thunder catch wind in the West - ESPN Australia

Class of 2024 honors chemistry professor Shuai Sun with HOPE … – KU Today

LAWRENCE The University of Kansas senior class has honored a chemist with the 2023 HOPE Award to Honor an Outstanding Progressive Educator.

Shuai Sun, assistant teaching professor of chemistry, was presented with the award Nov. 18 during the Sunflower Showdown football game between KU and Kansas State.

The HOPE Award was established by the Class of 1959 and is given to a faculty member who greatly affects students lives and exemplifies Jayhawk values in the classroom through exceptional teaching strategies. Today, the award remains the only honor given to faculty by the senior class through the Student Alumni and Endowment Board.

Sun typically teaches between 300-600 students each year in introductory chemistry courses. The student who nominated Sun saidhe cares not just about students academic success, but also how they are doing mentally.

He helps students achieve their goals outside of the classroom, the student wrote. He has helped me through my tough medical times and has helped me with DEIB issues. He has been a very reliable and compassionate professor to me and many others.

Sun said he was deeply honored and humbled to receive the award.

This recognition holds a special place in my heart, as it reflects the meaningful connections and impactful learning experiences shared with my students, he said. I am grateful for their trust and the opportunity to contribute not only to their academic growth but also to their personal and professional development.

Sun earned a doctorate in physical chemistry (theoretical and computational chemistry) from the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada. Before that, he earned a master's degree in physical chemistry (colloid and interface chemistry) from Shandong University and a bachelor's degree in chemistry and chemical education from Shandong Normal University, both in China.

My journey in chemistry from my academic roots in China and Canada to teaching hundreds of students each year at KU has been driven by a passion for education and a commitment to the well-being and success of every student, Sun said. The joy and fulfillment I find in teaching are amplified by the engagement and curiosity of my students.

Sun, who also wonfirst place in Best of Lawrence for teacher five years in a row from 2019-2023, said the HOPE Award is a testament to the collective effort of the university community in fostering an environment where every student can thrive.

Together, we continue to uphold and advance the esteemed Jayhawk values in every aspect of our academic journey, Sun said.

Photo by Missy Minear, Kansas Althletics Inc.

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Class of 2024 honors chemistry professor Shuai Sun with HOPE ... - KU Today

Lessons in Chemistry Season 2: Will AppleTV+ Show Get Another … – Men’s Health

While futuristic, post-apocalyptic, and

Based on the book of the same name, Lessons in Chemistry tells the story of Elizabeth Zott, a chemist and single mother in the 1960s who unexpectedly becomes the host of a cooking and science show for housewives, and she uses her show to teach about chemistry, cooking, and lessons about life and self-worth. Brie Larson stars as Elizabeth, and the cast is rounded out with Lewis Pullman, Aja Naomi King, and Stephanie Koenig.

The show was billed as a miniseries, and even though its 8-episode run has come to an end, the engaging storylines and stellar cast has many wondering if it's possible to see Larson take another turn as Elizabeth in a new season. Heres what we know about the chances for a second season of Lessons in Chemistry, including what the author herself thinks about a sequel.

As of right now, there are no concrete plans for a second season of Lessons in Chemistry. But while that may be disheartening, there also hasnt been a no to a second season from the team behind the show.

Earlier this month, showrunner Lee Eisenberg told TODAY.com that he was open to another season. Its so heartening to hear that people like the show enough that they want to tune back in and see where these characters go, said Eisenberg. And if we have the right story, wed love to explore it.

However, executive producer Sarah Adina Smith also told the outlet that she liked the fact that the show was a miniseries. I love limited series as a format because you have a beginning, middle and end, and youre not expanding things for the sake of expanding it, Smith explained. Bonnie Garmus, author of the novel, also said that she has no plans for writing a sequel to the book anytime soon, but she did note that a new novel based on Elizabeths could be on the way in the future.

People keep asking me if Im going to write a sequel and right now the answer is no because I started on this other story that I really like and I really feel like those characters are like Me! Me! Me! Me! Characters are really demanding, Garmus revealed to The Los Angeles Times. But I do think maybe down the road, I would tell a little bit more of what happens to her and what happens to Mad because its not like when it ends in the book, everythings fixed now.

Temi Adebowale was previously an Editorial Assistant at Men's Health, covering shows like Survivor, Peaky Blinders, and Tiger King. Prior to her entertainment work at MH, she was Newsroom Fellow, writing news stories across Hearst Digital Media's brands. Temi likes Rihanna, the StairMaster, and tacos.

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Lessons in Chemistry Season 2: Will AppleTV+ Show Get Another ... - Men's Health

Bonds are the ties that bind chemistry | Opinion – Chemistry World

The humble lines that link atoms and connote chemical connections in molecular structures are the simplest of chemistrys iconography. Yet those seemingly simple sticks belie our most complex and clouded concept: the chemical bond.

Bonds are chemistrys key intellectual property, but they are also a somewhat illusory idea. The chemical bond is a contingent and approximate concept, a chimeric heuristic that is moulded and adapted according to our need. Indeed, chemists still argue about what constitutes a bond, how it should be defined and whether they even really exist. Although if bonds are purely an invention, then it is one so supremely useful and utterly seductive that it is chemistrys greatest work of fiction. In our bonding collection, were celebrating the bond in all its fuzzy incarnations.

We might be approaching the point when the inadequate mental abstractions of the past start to hold us back

Despite a century of development in our increasingly sophisticated understanding of bonding, most chemists are content not to examine them too closely. The system first proposed by Gilbert Lewis in 1916 still endures as the cornerstone of chemistry education and practice and not because it is the most correct, but because it is so accessible and useful. Lewiss genius was intuiting his theory of electron pairing and sharing from observations made by other chemists and physicists regarding the structure of the atom, periodicity, and the properties and compositions of materials. When quantum physics came along a few years later, it promised to place bonding on a fundamental footing, and molecular orbital theory arguably could have superseded the Lewis model. Thanks largely to Linus Paulings valence bond theory, the Lewis model was instead adapted and incorporated, establishing its place as an ever-evolving idea.

More surprising than the Lewis models longevity, however, is that the phenomena it sought to explain are still being discussed and debated. What is a bond? What is going on in a bond? How and why do bonds form?We know that in covalent bond formation electron density accumulatesbetween the nuclei and energy is lowered, for example, but whether the basis for that energylowering effect is electrostatic or quantum mechanical is still debated.In this collection, Alistair Sterling and Martin Head-Gordon propose a theory that unifies the two sides of that debate. And Vanessa Seifert takes a nuanced look at how the way we think about bonds has helped chemistry progress.

Elsewhere in this issue, we look at the various ways bonds and bonding are still being explored and discovered. Mechanical bonds have gone from being a thought experiment to a new and entirely different type of connection that is essentially orthogonal to the outcomes of the Schrdinger equation. In the process, chemists have become expert at manipulating the delicate weak and non-bonding interactions that coax atoms into these unfamiliar arrangements. A veritable zoo of such weak bonds now exist for chemists to deploy in designing systems and engineering dynamic interactions. Finally, we look at the extremes of the chemical bonding spectrum and how the nature of the chemical bond changes as it is pushed into new realms by pressure and temperature.

Much has changed in the century since the Lewis model was proposed. In particular, the growth in computing power and computational techniques have overcome quantum chemistrys intital shortcoming of being too mathematically complicated to be of much use. Today, we have access to simulations at timescales and spatial scales relevant to understanding chemical phenomena. And the prospect of fully quantum calculations with quantum computers is on the horizon. As our understanding continues to develop we might approach the point when, in Lewiss words, the inadequate mental abstractions of the past start to hold us back. If that time is near, then bonds may yet come to divide us.

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Bonds are the ties that bind chemistry | Opinion - Chemistry World

What happened to Supper at Six in Lessons in Chemistry? – Claire and Jamie

Elizabeths show Supper at Six was on the rocks in the penultimate episode of Lessons in Chemistry. What happened to the show within the show?

Considering the time period, it shouldnt be surprising that a lot of peoplemostly mendidnt like what Elizabeth Zott was doing with her series Supper at Six. It taught women more than just cooking, and she wasnt willing to lie about how great canned goods and processed foods were when she knew that wasnt the case.

That led to the series being on the rocks. Would Elizabeth make changes to protect herself and the staff, or would she end up walking? What would Elizabeth then do with her life?

In the end, Elizabeth decided she needed to stick to her values. As much as she loved cooking and loved teaching women they could be more than housewives, she needed to be true to herself. That meant leaving Supper at Six.

While at Mads science fair, Elizabeth realizes that she has truly missed chemistry. Thats what she wants to go back into, and thats what she ends up doing by the end of the series. As she realizes this, she decides to teach chemistry instead of teaching cooking.

Elizabeth doesnt leave everyone in the lurch, though. She secures a sponsor through Tampax and then announces that a new host will be selected from the audience. After all, many women have continued to show up to learn, and its their time to shine.

The final moments push us three years into the future, where Elizabeth is teaching menand women. However, she points out that they cant call her doctor yet. She hasnt finished her Ph.D just yet.

Lessons in Chemistry is available to stream on Apple TV+.

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What happened to Supper at Six in Lessons in Chemistry? - Claire and Jamie

Are chemicals the elephant in the sustainability room? | Opinion – Chemistry World

If ever there was a time for chemists to show our mettle, this is it.

Projections indicate that if the chemical industry continues on its current trajectory, it will be responsible for 2438% of the total 202050 global carbon budget that would give us a fighting chance of limiting global warming to 1.5C. Or, to put it another more frightening way, business as usual is aligned with a 4C warming scenario.

The challenges are clearly unprecedented: predominantly fossil-based feedstocks, energy intensive production, inherent process emissions and complex but mostly linear value chains all work against the target low-carbon and more circular future state. Nothing short of a total rewire is required. But the flip side is equally true: the transition to a low-carbon, circular economy presents unparalleled opportunities for chemical innovation. So why do chemicals still sometimes feel like the elephant in the room?

As a chemist, I think we are well placed to rise to sustainability challenges by playing to our strengths. We have a head start when it comes to exploiting green skills and should capitalise on our existing toolkit. Our enquiring minds are primed to seek solutions to challenging problems, and we are steeped in navigating and managing risk. Even more fundamentally, we speak the language of carbon. While most of the population can claim they dont understand carbon emissions and footprints, we know exactly where the carbon is, long after it has left our labs and production facilities and flowed down the value chain.

Of course, we can cling to the barriers that frustrate our intentions. We know innovation is inherently difficult, especially when dealing with imperfect information. Many companies are finding plans to eliminate virgin fossil materials challenging to deliver, as recycled alternatives can still come with a hefty footprint of their own. But they cannot give up. Regulation can also be a double-edged sword. Few would decry progress towards a global UN Plastics Treaty, but the proposed EU Cross Border Adjustment Mechanism, which aims to level the playing field by taxing imports based on their associated emissions, is already meeting resistance over bureaucracy concerns.

There are increasingly positive signals, though. Regulators continue to internalise sustainability to align with an increasing stakeholder appetite for organisations to walk the walk on sustainability performance whether from end customers, buyers within supply chains or investors. Strengthening reporting and disclosure legislation is going further by linking to real climate transition plans rather than just laudable goals and the recent emergence of international sustainability standards clearly signpost what good looks like in this space.

This ever-strengthening link between organisations, their impact and how their stakeholders view their response will keep net zero and wider sustainability firmly on corporate agendas. Prevailing economic and political headwinds will only improve rather than erode the fundamental business case for sustainability and resilience. As customer-facing businesses look to their supply chains for help in meeting challenges, it will become increasingly uncomfortable for companies trying to hide upstream in the value chain.

So how do we, as chemists, maximise our role in realising positive sustainability outcomes in our organisations? I believe there are common themes we can draw on.

In my experience, few organisations have a firm foundation on which to build their response, and this keeps sustainability issues on the sidelines until someone comes asking. A pragmatic and beneficial approach is to map existing business or operating models against sustainability challenges, to properly understand what sustainability means in terms of risks, opportunities, impacts and dependencies and so frame this against other priorities. Introducing an internal carbon price can also be especially illuminating, helping to support business cases for targeted and prioritised interventions.

Beyond internal action we will also need wider engagements and collaborations if we are to fully match ambition with progress, especially those that bring us closer to end users and translate our chemistry into real world problem-solving. It is unlikely that any one business will solve its challenges wholly on its own and common solutions harbour advantages of lowering risk and increasing implementation efficiencies.

Most fundamentally though, I often find that organisations are failing to fully capitalise on the values and mindsets that already reside in their people, stifling productivity and what could be. When it comes to sustainability, most of us are already on the page. As individuals then, we need to champion our values and harness our skills. And as organisations, we need to create and live cultures where everyone contributes positively to the sustainability agenda so we can all play a fuller role in creating the future we need.

Roger Wareing is a former chemist turned business sustainability consultant

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How important is relationship chemistry? | dating advice – Harper’s Bazaar UK

Anyone whos been on their fair share of dates will know the feeling: youre getting along really well, theyre making you laugh, you can see theyre attractive. On paper, this should be a perfect match but theres just something missing. Some people call it chemistry, others love at first sight; Carrie Bradshaw memorably termed it the zsa zsa zsu. Were all conditioned to believe in that indefinable spark, which can be the make-or-break element of a successful relationship. But how important is that initial pull of cant-resist-you attraction?

Specific chemicals in the brain, like dopamine and vasopressin, create lust and make us focus on that one person: they make us crave them, almost obsess about them, says relationship psychologist

Andie and Ben fall in love in How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days, despite Andie doing her best to achieve the opposite

But for those worried that a partnership might be dead in the water if those first-date butterflies aren't there, theres good news: theres a big step between lust and love, and some of the most successful relationships do develop over time. The classic trope of friends to more-than-friends is more than just a storyline used in romantic comedies like When Harry Met Sally; in fact, friendship has been proven as one of the best foundations on which to build a relationship, and more than two-thirds of British couples start out as friends first. In these cases, attraction develops from forming an emotional bond first, says Gottlieb. This is crucial for relationship longevity.

Initial attraction is intoxicating, as well socially highly valued in a society that still promotes romantic ideals such as The One. However, real relationships are much more about communication and commitment than they are fireworks in the early days, says Gottlieb. Attraction is built from compatibility, and compatibility can be created, she explains. For example, even if partners dont have the same hobbies or interests, they can still bond over different interests by allowing each other to talk about their passions and by asking questions. Films like How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days and the newly released Anyone But You, starring Sydney Sweeney, are testament to how spending quality time with someone can make attraction blossom out of less than nothing as the old adage goes, theres a thin line between love and hate.

This knowledge that good relationships dont always come naturally isnt just helpful for single people on the lookout for love. Its also very important for couples who lose their initial spark, says Gottlieb. Couples need to prioritise alone time and schedule date nights, like they did at the beginning. A lot of attraction in dating is the result of novelty, and merely being intimate with a new person. There are many opportunities to create novelty in a long-term relationship, like going to new places together, trying a different hobby, or being more romantic with each other.

So the next time youre tempted to call it quits after a few dates, or even end a longer relationship that seems to have lost its excitement, remember that much of romantic love is, well, romanticised. Attraction on its own cant guarantee long-term relationship success, warns Gottlieb, so dont overrate passion at the expense of reliability, stability and genuine affection. Its about committing to that person, prioritising the relationship, and a willingness to put in the continued effort. While theres nothing quite like that first dopamine hit, real love is about celebrating what comes next in all its forms.

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The Fragrant Phenomenon: Christmas Trees and Their Invisible Affect on Indoor Air Chemistry – SciTechDaily

Researchers at NIST studied the emission of VOCs from live Christmas trees and their interaction with ozone. They found that monoterpenes are the primary VOCs emitted, which decrease over time and react with ozone to form low levels of formaldehyde. The study concludes that Christmas trees have a minimal impact on indoor air quality for most people. Credit: SciTechDaily.com

Every holiday season, Americans buy nearly 30 million live Christmas trees. Many families enjoy not only having a live tree inside their homes but also smelling the fresh fragrance it creates. That smell comes from chemicals called volatile organic compounds (VOCs). However, little is known about how much is emitted and whether they have any health impacts.

Our nose is a good chemical sensor, said Dustin Poppendieck, an environmental engineer at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). We know that these trees are emitting something, and the question then becomes: How big of a source is it? We wanted to explore which chemicals are emitted and how much, and to put that into the context of other sources of chemicals in a house, he said.

To answer these questions, Poppendieck and his NIST colleagues took a common type of Christmas tree a Douglas fir and sealed it inside a chamber. They then measured the amount and type of VOCs it emitted over 17 days. They also investigated whether the VOCs reacted with other components of indoor air to create new compounds.

The teams findings have been published in the journal Indoor Environments.

NIST researchers placed a common type of Christmas tree in a sealed chamber for 17 days to monitor and measure the chemicals it emits. These chemicals, called volatile organic compounds (VOCs), give that pine smell and can react with ozone to form byproducts. The researchers found low amounts of these chemicals, which may be a potential concern for people who are sensitive to them. Credit: M. King/NIST

The fresh smell that is commonly associated with Christmas trees comes from a group of VOCs called monoterpenes, which are also found in air fresheners, candles and some personal care products. In the outdoors, conifers, the group of plants that includes most Christmas trees, release monoterpenes, and they can affect outdoor air quality. But little is known about how much monoterpene is released when a tree is cut down and placed indoors.

Studies also show monoterpenes can react with ozone. Ozone in the upper atmosphere serves as a protective barrier against the Sun. At ground level, ozone is created through chemical reactions with light and can cause symptoms such as coughing and throat irritation. Ozone also reacts readily with other chemicals in the air to form new compounds. So, the researchers were interested in seeing the effects of ozone in the presence of an indoor tree.

They placed it inside an environmentally controlled chamber, where they could measure the chemicals emitted from the tree in real time. Using a technique that can detect airborne organic compounds, known as proton-transfer reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS), they measured the VOCs emitted over a 17-day period.

In their experiment, the researchers simulated a home environment. They decorated the tree in a typical holiday lighting setup and shone bright lights on it to mimic the day-night cycle. They turned off the lights every 12 hours and watered the tree every day. They brought in outside air at a rate typical for households, and constantly measured chemicals in the indoor air.

Monoterpenes were the most abundant VOC emitted from the tree. They peaked during the first day before diminishing significantly by the third day. Their concentration was initially at the same level of a plug-in air freshener or newly constructed house before it quickly dropped by nearly 10 times its original amount, said Poppendieck. The researchers detected 52 distinct types of monoterpenes.

Researchers then injected ozone into the chamber to see how it affected indoor air chemistry. They found that ozone reacted with the monoterpenes, forming byproducts such as formaldehyde, another type of VOC, as well as other reactive chemicals. The monoterpene concentration diminished even more with the introduction of ozone, while formaldehyde levels rose, which showed an impact on indoor air chemistry. However, the amount of formaldehyde created was relatively small at around 1 part per billion. Typical U.S. houses have formaldehyde concentrations ranging from 20 to 30 parts per billion.

For people who are sensitive to VOCs, Christmas trees could be one possible cause for watery eyes and noses, especially when initially brought indoors. In that case, Poppendieck suggests, opening a window near the tree will reduce exposure. In addition, newly cut trees can be left outdoors or in a garage for three days before bringing them into the home as the emission strength naturally decays over time.

But for most people, Poppendieck said, this shouldnt be a major concern. Im still going to have a Christmas tree in my house.

Reference: Jingle bells, what are those smells? Indoor VOC emissions from a live Christmas tree by Dustin Poppendieck, Rileigh Robertson and Michael F. Link, 22 December 2023, Indoor Environments. DOI: 10.1016/j.indenv.2023.100002

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Tom Hanks Talks Meg Ryan Chemistry, Reveals Why They Worked So Well Together – Just Jared

Tom Hanks is opening up about working with Meg Ryan!

The 67-year-old actor and the 62-year-old actress worked together on multiple projects, which includes Youve Got Mail, Sleepless in Seattle, Ithaca, Joe Versus the Volcano and Everything Is Copy.

For Youve Got Mails recent 25 year anniversary on December 18th, an old interview resurfaced where the actor talked about the chemistry between him and his co-star.

Keep reading to find out more

Its just a natural thing, he told ET. Its like, why are we friends with the people that were friends with?

I must say, Meg and I are not real close pals, he shared at the time. We see each other every now and again. Its like, we dont hang out for coffee. But when we pick up, we just pick up where we left off and its an effortless thing that I dont think either one of us examines it too much because if we did, itd be a problem.

We dont plan. We just do it, he added.

If you missed it, Tom recently revealed what he would do if he went to outer space.

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Cowboy chemistry working on court – American Press | American Press – American Press

Published 8:25 pm Tuesday, December 26, 2023

Back before the season began, Will Wade said it would take time for this group of Cowboys to come together.

I think we will be a work in progress, was Wade. We will be a much better basketball team at the end of February than we are right now.

The first-year McNeese State head coach may have been sandbagging, or he may just have been telling the truth.

It doesnt matter now, for the fact is McNeese is off to a surprisingly strong 10-2 start as they get ready for their biggest test of the season, a trip to Michigan on Friday.

The Cowboys will take on the 6-6 Wolverines from the Big Ten as their last pre-conference game. It will also close out the 2023 portion of their schedule.

At first glance at the Cowboy schedule an 8-5 start would have been impressive, now it seems silly to even think that. McNeese has won five in a row and is 7-0 at home.

The Pokes are also 6-2 against other Mid-Majors, with wins on the road over Alabama-Birmingham and Virginia Commonwealth.

Their last two victories have come over the best from last years Sun Belt Conference, as they beat defending regular-season champ Southern Miss and then tournament winner Louisiana-Lafayette.

While unexpected to most, the Cowboys themselves are not surprised.

I think we should be 12-0, said center Antavion Collum.

When asked why these Cowboys are so good so fast Collum answered, We like playing together.

To a man, each player talks first about chemistry, which is a big surprise when you consider very few of them ever met before last summer let alone play together.

We all are here for a reason, said guard Shahada Wells. Coach Wade brought us together with the vision of doing something special this season. We are all here to win.

Not all of the bonding came on the court, in fact early in the process little did. It was more about getting to know each other as people and sharing their journeys to McNeese as much as anything.

We spent a lot of time doing things off the court together, said forward Christian Shumate. Coaches put us in a lot of tough spots and we went through them together.

Learning through adversity has been a key. So when they fell down to ULL by 13 with 11 minutes left and two starters were ejected there was no panic.

We just came together at that point, said Wells. We believe in each other. We knew we could get it done.

They also believe in each other, especially when it comes to scoring. When DJ Richards came off the bench to score a career-high 24 points against Southern Miss he quickly gave credit to the other Cowboys.

They got me the ball in good spots, said Richards. It was just my night. We have a lot of guys who can score, its just whose night it is.

And it is not just one offense that McNeese is connected either. The Pokes entered this week ranked third in the nation in team defense, allowing just 57.8 points a game.

That puts them in the company of some big programs like Houston, which is first, Virginia (2nd), and Iowa State (4th). Michigan, which averages 83.8 a game, good for 31st in the nation, will test that.

The Cowboys say they will be ready.

It will be a big challenge for us and we are looking forward to it, said Collum.

So are McNeese fans who want to see just how far chemistry can take this club.

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Ancient Mummy-Making Techniques Are Finally Unwrapped – DISCOVER Magazine

Around 2,600 years ago, a small ceramic bowl sat in a subterranean workshop. Carrying hints of cedar and honey, the bowl was used by Egyptian embalmers to blend essential oils and beeswax for the multimonth process that transformed corpses into mummies.

Reciting incantations, removing organs, andapplying substances that made bodies dry, fragrant, and microbe-free, the embalmers employed a multifacetedset of skills.

They knew the ritual practices, but also [a] kind of chemistry, says Maxime Rageot, abiomolecular archaeologist at the University of Tbingen in Germany.

Over the past four years, Rageot and colleagues have gained unprecedented insights into the substances and steps involved inancient Egyptian mummy-making. Their analysis of molecules trapped in pottery, aspublished in a Nature paper from February 2023, revealedthat embalmers sourced ingredients from surprisingly far-flung lands for their specific biomolecular properties.

The Egyptians perfected the practice of mummification over the course of several thousand years, transforming the natural desiccation of bodies into a sophisticated ritual and chemical process between the fifth and first millenniums B.C.E. During the time of the pharaohs, professionals spent up to 70days transforming a tender corpse into a linen-wrapped, afterlife-ready mummy treating it with spells and prayers, as well as substances that mitigated moisture, bacteria, fungi, and stink.

But scholars have long debated how to translate the ingredients named in ancient inscriptions and papyri, meaning that much of the mummy recipe has remained a mystery. And whilesome ingredients have been identified from the molecular analyses of mummies from museums around the world, these methods cannot reveal how specific substances figured into the mummification process whether they were applied to the bandages or the head, for instance, for the purpose of preserving tissues or fending off bacteria.

The possibility of linking substances and steps arrived in 2018, when the late archaeologist Ramadan Hussein invited Rageot to join his excavations at Saqqara, an ancient city about 12 miles south of Cairo. There, Husseins team had uncovered an ancient facility for treating and storing corpses, dated to around 664 to 525 B.C.E. Featuring a workshop more than 40 feet underground, the facility held over 100pottery vessels bearing instructions like to make the odor pleasant, for making beautiful the skin, and head, boil.

Selecting 31 of these pots for closer analysis, Rageot set out to identify their long-lost contents. But because Egypt lacked a specialized laboratory for this kind of work, he and his team brought the pots to a local food chemistry lab, which they converted into one of the countrys only facilities for analyzing ancient biomolecules. Drilling pinches of clay powder from the pots interiors and analyzing the powder in the labs mass spectrometer, they determined which ancient molecules had seeped into the potterys pores.

The successful analyses of the pots revealed embalmers used diverse and exotic materials that could curb moisture, smells, and mummy-munching organisms: Bitumen tar probably from the Dead Sea; pistachio, juniper, and olive oils from the Mediterranean; and tree resins from the tropical forests of Asia and possibly sub-Saharan Africa. To source these items, the embalmers relied on trade that spanned much of their known world.

The diversity of bioproducts which were used, Rageot says, was really impressive.

Now that the Egyptian lab exists, the researchers plan to analyze mummy-making ingredients from more sites. Their hope is to trace how mummification transformed across time and space, applying modern chemical methods to unravel their ancient counterparts.

This story was originally published in our January February 2024 issue.Click hereto subscribe to read more stories like this one.

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This GPT-powered robot chemist designs reactions and makes drugs on its own – Nature.com

The autonomous chemical system Coscientist uses an LLM to run robotic laboratory equipment.Credit: Carnegie Mellon University

Chemists have used ChatGPT to design and conduct complex chemical reactions using a robotic laboratory set-up.

The system, called Coscientist, can design, code and carry out several reactions making compounds including paracetamol and aspirin in the wet lab using its robot apparatus. The approach was described in Nature1 on 20 December.

The moment I saw a non-organic intelligence be able to autonomously plan, design and execute a chemical reaction that was invented by humans, that was amazing, says chemist Gabe Gomes at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, who led the research. It was a holy crap moment.

Fast-paced improvements in artificial intelligence (AI) have seen applications for these tools proliferate throughout science. But for researchers working at the bench or those who arent versed in computer code, AI approaches arent as accessible or so thought Gomes.

When the latest version of the large language model (LLM) behind ChatGPT, called GPT-4, was unveiled in March, Gomes and his team set about making it work for chemists.

The result, Coscientist1, uses the latest powerful LLMs, including GPT-4, to scour the chemical literature and design a reaction pathway to make a molecule when prompted by a human. The LLM reads through instruction manuals on the Internet and decides on the best kit and reagents in its arsenal to make the molecule in real life.

The AI also uses the LLM Claude, developed by the AI firm Anthropic in San Francisco, California, and one called Falcon-40B-Instruct built by the Technology Innovation Institute in Abu Dhabi.

The team prompted the system to plan a synthesis for several known molecules, including the painkillers paracetamol and aspirin, and the organic molecules nitroaniline and phenolphthalein. In the planning stage, Coscientist was able to work out the steps that would give the best reaction yields overall. It made the molecules correctly.

This is a great demonstration of how the literature can be explored using LLMs to help come up with ideas of feasible chemical reactions, says Lee Cronin, a chemist at the University of Glasgow, UK.

The team also tried a more complicated experiment asking Coscientist to execute a reaction called SuzukiMiyaura coupling, which forms carboncarbon bonds and is important in drug discovery. The system aced this test, too.

The group is one of many working on LLM-driven chemistry robots. One such robot, called ChemCrow, was developed at around the same time as Coscientist and can plan and make a range of molecules, including the insecticide DEET2. (Chemist Andrew White at the University of Rochester in New York, who led the team that developed ChemCrow, declined Natures request for comment.)

Tools such as Coscientist are likely to become more commonly used, says Tiago Rodrigues, a pharmaceutical chemist at the University of Lisbon. I can really see a future where automation hardware comes equipped with these AI assistants. Self-driving labs are the future, and AI tools are needed to fully automate the design-make-test cycle, he says.

Routine tasks can now be done by these systems, but Rodrigues adds that most research questions, especially in drug discovery, are still out of reach. Its not just a good understanding of chemistry that is needed, but also biology.

Coscientist can do most of the things that really well-trained chemists can do. And I think about that a lot, says Gomes. His team hasnt made the full code behind its invention freely available, and Gomes says that it is important to think carefully about how and where technologies such as Coscientist and ChemCrow are used, because some applications are likely to be dangerous.

Im not interested in the idea of replacing people and their livelihoods, and their spark and their innovation and their drive, Gomes says.

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We don’t hang out for coffee: Tom Hanks Made a Startling Revelation About Meg Ryan That Makes Their Chemistry … – FandomWire

Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan are two actors who, perhaps, have one of the best on-screen chemistry. This aspect of their films has become so distinct that they have worked together a few times. They first starred in the 1990 film, Joe Versus the Volcano,which, though was a flop, audiences could not deny the dynamic these two shared. Following close was 1993s Sleepless in Seattle,which many think of as one of the most beautiful romance films of all time. Finally, the two starred in the 1998 film, Youve Got Mail, which has certainly become one of their most iconic projects of all time.

The authenticity of their relationship with each other in front of a camera has many questioning how exactly they are able to achieve this. During an interview, Hanks revealed how their on-screen chemistry differs from their real life, putting forth an answer to this age-old question.

Also Read: Tom Hanks Was Exhausted After He Was Given an Impossible Job in One of the Best Christmas Movies Ever: The Polar Express

During the Youve Got Mail, Tom Hanks gave a press convince, which has resurfaced thanks to Entertainment Tonight. Here, the actor revealed the true nature of his relationship with Meg Ryan and how the two are with each other when the cameras are turned off. He confessed that they are not as close as many would think. While the statement certainly does not mean that they are unable to tolerate the other, it seems that the two are simply surface-level friends.

Its just a natural thing.he added,I must say,Meg and I are not real close pals, he shockingly remarked. We see each other every now and again. Its like, we dont hang out for coffee.

He elaborated, adding that their dynamic is simply a natural thing and is not a reflection of their real-world connection. He mentioned that, though they do see each other now and then, they are not close enough to hang out with each other at restaurants or have coffee together.

Also Read: You guys are the wrong gender to understand: Tom Hanks Went Off the Rails in One Meg Ryan Movie That Made Him ExtremelyCranky

The closeness, or the lack thereof, of Tom Hanks and Meg Ryans relationship, has seemed to have absolutely no impact on their rapport when they are working on films together. Hanks mentioned exactly this during this interview, adding that though they do not necessarily interact outside of work when they do meet after a long time, they are the same as each other, not having awkwardness weighing down their exchanges.

But when we pick up, we just pick up where we left off and its an effortless thing that I dont think either one of us examines it too much because if we did, itd be a problem. We dont plan. We just do it,

Hanks added that he finds their dynamic to be effortless, one where neither has to think too much about what the other thinks of them and they simply co-exist and enjoy each others company. Knowing this information certainly adds another layer of complexity to the films that feature Hanks and Ryan.

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We don't hang out for coffee: Tom Hanks Made a Startling Revelation About Meg Ryan That Makes Their Chemistry ... - FandomWire

UAlbany men’s basketball: Beagle, Thomas developing on-court … – The Daily Gazette

ALBANY Sebastian Thomas had 10 assists in Wednesdays win against Boston University, a feat that tied a UAlbany mens basketball program record.

The scary part for UAlbany opponents?

Great Danes center Jonathan Beagle thinks Thomas, who transferred to UAlbany from Rhode Island, is just getting going. The talented big man, last seasons America East Rookie of the Year, actually thinks he somewhat got in the way of Thomas having an even better night in UAlbanys 86-72 win that opened Broadview Center.

"I think we're in a good flow, but, like we always talk about, we can do way better, Beagle said. I think I'm at the top of the floor too much, at the 3-point line, taking up his space. . . . I just need to get used to playing with these guys, and as we continue to do that, his 10 assists will probably go to 13.

It was probably too harsh a self-assessment, especially after a win that saw the Hudson Falls native contribute 14 points on 4 of 5 shooting from the floor, plus eight rebounds. But Beagles comments also showed how the sophomore is trying to learn the game of the programs new lead guard, who is doing the same with the Great Danes 6-foot-10 big man.

"He's the first center I've played with that's able to push the ball off a rebound, has play-making ability, can shoot it, finish, Thomas said of Beagle. He does it all. He's probably the first big man that I could say that I played with who kind of does it all.

While wing player Amare Marshall stole the show in the Great Danes Albany Cup win against Siena this past Sunday with a 33-point showing, Beagle and Thomas join Marshall in what UAlbany needs to be a high-scoring trio. Thats worked out so far this season, with Marshall averaging 17.4 points per game, Thomas scoring 16.6 and Beagle at 11.4 ahead of 4-3 UAlbanys 8 p.m. game Saturday against 1-4 Dartmouth at Broadview Center.

Each of those three players for UAlbany is capable of attacking in transition and in a 1-on-1 setting, but the Great Danes offense will be at its best when the 6-foot-1 Thomas and Beagle are able to add a potent pick-and-roll option to the menu for head coach Dwayne Killings team.

Once we figure out the pick-and-roll game, I think it will be something that a lot of teams will struggle with, said Thomas, who scored 16 points against Boston University.

But developing that on-court connection takes time.

"I think they really have a great respect for each other. They have a really good relationship; they spend a lot of time with each other, Killings said. I think what they can become is a really dynamic ball-screen tandem, if you will, a dribble-hand-off tandem. Some of that just takes time. Game reps, getting a feel for it.

Some of it, too, takes some re-programming.

For Thomas, that means being comfortable with heading up the floor without the ball in his hands on some possessions, so that Beagle can lead a fast break off his own rebound.

For Beagle, it means changing how he reacts after setting a screen.

In the past, Beagle set a pick, then usually popped to the perimeter to make himself an option for a pass on the perimeter. If Beagle got the pass, he was able to create his own shot or one for a teammate.

Now, its Thomas who can look for others, and UAlbany needs a rolling Beagle to create space for others and to be a threat to take a pass for a dunk.

So instead of constantly trying to be a facilitator, we want him to put pressure on the paint as much as he can, Killings said. And I think he's embracing it, it's just ... we all have habits that we do, [so] it's just [about] changing some of his habits.

I'm working on it, Beagle said. I've been watching film and I've been thinking about it more, but, give me a game or two, and I'll open the floor up more and I won't be in that habit.

UAlbany, though, already feels pretty good about its early season results. At 4-3, UAlbany is over .500 for the first time since February 2020 and is on its first three-game winning streak since February 2022.

When Beagle and Thomas fully get going as a duo?

Thats something that could make sure the Great Danes keep collecting wins.

I think they're coming along, Killings said. There's some possessions [already] that you're like, Wow, yeah, that's pretty impressive what those two guys can do not only for each other, but for other guys."

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Glen Powell and Sydney Sweeney’s chemistry can’t save Anyone But You – Vox.com

The most compelling reason to sit through all 104 minutes of Anyone But You is closure. Im not referring to finishing the uneven movie, but the opportunity to finally witness the are they or arent they? chemistry between the movies extremely good-looking blonde leads Glen Powell and Sydney Sweeney.

During filming earlier this year, Powell and Sweeney (a pairing I had affectionately dubbed Poweeney) seemed closer than typical co-stars. They posted each other on Instagram. In those posts, they smiled at each other in a way that one does not usually smile at coworkers (genuine, earnest, happy). They had nicknames for each other. They hugged and went to zoos, where they may have hugged some more. After the internet took notice, Powell and his girlfriend at the time, Gigi Paris, broke up.

Powell and Sweeneys off-screen relationship sparked the fantasy that something romantic happened while shooting Anyone But You; that two actors who spent an entire movie acting like they were in love actually fell in love. Was there something in the script? Was it shooting in beautiful Australia for weeks at a time? Could it all be real?

When the trailer for Anyone But You came out this excitement cooled some. But now, with the films release, the final piece of the puzzle is here. Each scene becomes an opportunity to search for hints of that off-screen chemistry, a flicker that these two did in fact like-like each other. Every touch, every gaze, every interaction could be something more than acting. By the end, I found myself believing more in the myth of Poweeney than in the film itself.

The movie is bad, but the chemistry: Its good.

For whatever reason, Anyone But You begins its story in the allegedly romantic city of Boston where two extremely attractive people resting bedroom eyes Bea (Sweeney) and bright-in-the-irises Ben (Powell) meet in a coffee shop in a way clumsy enough to endear them to each other, and, hopefully, the audience to both. She desperately needs to pee and will explode if she has to wait in line, attempting to throw Massachusetts state bathroom law at the barista. Hes at the front of the queue and throws her a lifesaver by pretending shes his wife. Shes grateful. Hes charmed. He smiles. Shes charmed.

Are you going to ask me out now? Bea asks, her face softening into a hopeful pout. Powells Ben, equipped with a face full of pleasing angles from nose to chin, grins and theyre off.

What we dont quite know yet is that the characters names, convoluted plot, and the series of misunderstandings and misinterpretations to come are all nods to Much Ado About Nothing, Shakespeares comedy about the mess of courtship and feeble human feelings. But the movie starts this wacky homage at a slow boil, and never fully commits. Going full Shakespeare would set an impossibly high bar and there wouldnt be a lot of logic in shoving a suspected-female-impurity plotline into a movie that revolves around a lesbian wedding.

Instead, Anyone But You aims for something halfway between adaptation and reference. Halfway between rom-com and raunch comedy, the film never really figures out its tone. After that meet cute, Bea and Ben spend the day together, which turns into night, eventually falling asleep in each others arms. They also dont have sex which, in rom-com lore, signifies that this connection is something deeper than physical. Also, I guess, that Bostonian love is sometimes chaste and beautiful.

The main actors are a winning combination but something is off. Bea is a hopeless romantic, someone who says shes been thinking about marriage since she was a little kid, back when she was making wedding dresses out of toilet paper. Sweeney made a name for herself playing icier, meaner characters, i.e., Cassie in Euphoria and the ultra-cynical Olivia Mossbacher in White Lotus. Here, her delivery a bit of a mumble, a blush of uptalk hasnt changed from her previous roles, so it feels like shes playing it all with a bit of a wink. Shes impossible to look away from on-screen a star but shes not quite believable as a naive rom-com hero.

Powell, however, is solidly in his wheelhouse as a smarmy finance bro. Ben feels like a continuation of Powells turn as Hangman in Top Gun: Maverick, where the actor cocked his head and smirked off with the whole movie. He knows how to hit just the right amount of wryness; how to push back against his (impressive) physicality to make the character just likable enough that you hate yourself for doing so. The movies best jokes are ones Powell makes at his own expense, like almost drowning because hes hot girl fit and only ever worked vanity muscles.

For no discernible reason, Bea sneaks out the morning after not even taking down Bens number. Upon finding out that he was ditched, Ben says some nasty things about Bea to his friend Pete (GaTa), which she inexplicably overhears. Everyone in this movie has an acute sense of hearing and an uncanny sense of timing.

After this misunderstanding, Bea and Bens hurt escalates into extreme dislike. Flash-forward six months, and they are forced together at a bar. Her sister is dating Petes sister, who is also Bens lifelong friend. Bea calls Ben a fuckboy, and he tells her she has abandonment issues. She says hes a loser finance bro, and he calls her a bitch. While the two could coexist and dislike each other from a distance Boston is ostensibly a city full of people who loathe each other their paths become intertwined when the women get engaged, include Bea and Ben in the wedding party, and have their nuptials in Australia. Its there that the side characters reveal themselves to be full of Bard-inflected frivolity and scheming. And its there, as the movies copious marketing materials have relentlessly reminded us all, the two must pretend to like each other and, perhaps, end up somewhere more than just pretending.

With such a flimsy script, Powell and Sweeneys chemistry has to do the heavy lifting. And often, it does! Whatever it is that they have acting skill, a secret relationship, a shared language based on being the absolute pinnacle of ACC school hot, etc. its so strong that it doesnt matter that their characters often dont sound or act like humans (Permission to put my left hand on your right buttock, Powell says to Sweeney at one not-so-memorable point).

This works even when it really shouldnt. At one point, Ben fries a grilled cheese for Bea, and she bites into it too quickly. Instead of handing her a glass of water or a paper towel to spit it out, Ben lowers his chin and blows into her mouth. Is it still hot? he asks. This is, objectively, not how to cool down a mouth. But Powell and Sweeney fully create the illusion that breathing into a mouth full of blisteringly hot cheese and butter is an intoxicant we all must try.

The possibility of Poweeney eclipses Ben and Bea as they teeter-totter on a sailboat, talking about how everyone wants to get them together. If only the story was suited to both stars strengths. If they were to do another movie together, a do-over, they wouldnt be the first: Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan first paired up in the often-ignored Joe Versus the Volcano before Sleepless in Seattle and Youve Got Mail; Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell connected on the set of the forgettable Swing Shift before co-starring in Overboard (and life). Theres at least one good rom-com in both of them.

At the heart of it, the prospect of Powell and Sweeney falling for each other or at least a Powell type and an actual Sweeney type remains far more compelling and convincing than the story thats been constructed
for Anyone But You. Of course its not just possible or even probable, but nearly certain that all this chemistry is just good acting, coupled with a savvy marketing and social media campaign.

Whatever it is here that works, it surely wasnt anything in the script.

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Glen Powell and Sydney Sweeney's chemistry can't save Anyone But You - Vox.com

Researchers explore underground water chemistry at SURF to open … – Rapid City Journal

Dr. Scott Beeler (left) and Dr. Sarah Keenan from South Dakota Mines are two researchers taking an in-depth look at the water chemistry at various locations underground at SURF.

If you have ever reeled at the taste of tap water when traveling in a new place, youve found first-hand that water is not the same everywhere. This is part of what two researchers are exploring with a new project using samples of water collected inside the Sanford Underground Research Facility.

The water underground at SURF is unique in that it sometimes contains extremophiles, microbes that live in extreme places on earth. Extremophiles are found in places such as the hot springs of Yellowstone, hydrothermal vents at the bottom of the ocean, and the ground water that seeps into tiny cracks deep inside the earth.

Extremophiles are valuable to biologists because they have evolved unique properties that allow them to thrive in resource-poor environments. These properties make them excellent candidates for a host of applications, from the creation of new antibiotics to biofuels to biodegradable plastics.

There has been a lot of interest in searching for and understanding the microbes that live in SURF and the value these extremophiles have for science. But there has been less work on characterizing the chemistry of the water that they're living in at SURF, said Dr. Scott Beeler, a research scientist at South Dakota Mines, and the principal investigator on the study. And so, what we're doing is filling in data gaps in water chemistry.

Dr. Sarah Keenan, a geochemist and assistant professor of geology and geological engineering at South Dakota Mines, is the co-principal investigator on the research alongside Beeler. Their characterization of the water at SURF includes a suite of scientific instruments located in Keenans laboratory and at the Engineering and Mining Experiment Station located at South Dakota Mines.

In a nutshell, preliminary findings show that water chemistry varies widely throughout SURF providing numerous types of habitats for microbial life.

For example, the amount of elements in the water such as iron and manganese, which microorganisms can use as a source of energy, have over a thousandfold range in concentrations across different locations in SURF, said Beeler.

While the current work is focused on determining the amount of variability in water chemistry at SURF, the ultimate goal is to understand what controls this variability.

Reghan DeBoer, a senior studying geology at South Dakota Mines, takes a water sample at SURF.

We're hoping to piece together the different water chemistry and how it might relate to the different types of rocks the water is interacting with underground at SURF. This can help us understand the types of microbial life different sites underground might be hosting, Keenan said.

The research might even have value in a future search for extraterrestrial life. This kind of study can show the types of water chemistry life favors.

And thats important because you might have instrumentation on future satellites, a spacecraft, or a rover on a distant moon that can test chemistry without being able to do an entire range of microbial sequencing, Beeler said.

Beeler and Keenans research is funded by the NASA South Dakota Space Grant Consortium. The research involves students at Mines who are gathering samples from various sites underground at SURF and testing those samples in labs at Mines.

Reghan DeBoer is a senior studying geology at Mines who was also an intern at SURF in the summer of 2022. For DeBoer, the opportunity to take part in this kind of study is valuable.

I love being able to help on this research, and I love going underground at SURF and learning how to use the testing equipment, DeBoer said. Im taking an aqueous geochemistry class right now and this hands-on experience is really helping me connect that classroom work with the real world.

A fellow student on the project, Riley Kortenbusch, agreed. He is a sophomore studying geology at Mines.

Riley Kortenbusch (left) and Reghan DeBoer collect and filter water samples from SURF to return to the lab for further analysis.

Im just getting introduced in my core geology classes and this gives me a chance to practice geochemistry to see if this is an area I want to pursue. Its a little out of my wheelhouse but this real-world experience also helps me connect and fill in the gaps I might be missing in my classroom, Kortenbusch said.

The NASA South Dakota Space Grant Consortium grant funding this five-month study is intended to help researchers gather preliminary data needed to make the case for a larger project.

So that's exactly what we're doing, Beeler said. Hopefully, if our story and the data we collect is compelling enough, we will have enough for a proposal to do more of this extensive geochemical sampling underground in the Black Hills.

Besides SURF, the team is also taking water samples from multiple caves around the Black Hills. These caves are generally more shallow and in different types of rock than the sampling locations at SURF, but still hold unique and rare forms of microbial life. The effort is to build a better understanding of water chemistry and life in a broad area.

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Researchers explore underground water chemistry at SURF to open ... - Rapid City Journal

Green Chemistry Breakthrough: New Photocatalytic Borylation … – SciTechDaily

By Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy Sciences November 29, 2023

A breakthrough study team introduces an efficient and recyclable photocatalytic system for borylation reactions using NHC-BH3, facilitating sustainable, high-value chemical syntheses under mild conditions. Credit: DICP

A team headed by Professor Dai Wen at the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, part of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, successfully realized borylation reactions using N-heterocyclic carbene boranes (NHC-BH3). They utilized a straightforward and effective heterogeneous photocatalytic system. This method enabled the synthesis of valuable chemical transformations, such as hydroboration and boron substitution products.

The study was published in the journal Angewandte Chemie International Edition.

NHC-BH3 are novel boron sources in free radical borylation reactions due to their stable chemical properties and straightforward preparation method. However, the application of NHC-BH3 is hindered by the requirement of a large quantity of harmful free radical initiators, as well as expensive and non-recyclable homogeneous photocatalysts.

In this study, the researchers utilized cadmium sulfide nanosheets, which were easily prepared, as heterogeneous photocatalysts. And they served NHC-BH3 as a boron source, enabling the selective borylation reaction of various alkenes, alkynes, imines, aromatic (hetero) rings, and bioactive molecules under room temperature and light conditions. Since the conversion process fully utilized photogenerated electron-hole pairs, the need for sacrificial agents was eliminated.

Furthermore, they found that the photocatalytic system could not only achieve gram-scale scale-up but also maintain a stable yield after multiple cycles of the catalyst. It could also serve as a recyclable general platform, allowing the recovered catalyst to continue catalyzing different kinds of substrates.

Our study provides new ideas for the development of free radical borylation reactions using NHC-BH3 as a boron source, and the organoboranes obtained from the reaction may be used to synthesize synthetic building blocks that contain hydroxyl, borate, and difluoroborane reactive sites, said Prof. Dai.

Reference: Facile Borylation of Alkenes, Alkynes, Imines, Arenes and Heteroarenes with N-Heterocyclic Carbene-Boranes and a Heterogeneous Semiconductor Photocatalyst by Fukai Xie, Zhan Mao, Dennis P. Curran, Hongliang Liang and Wen Dai, 09 August 2023,Angewandte Chemie International Edition. DOI: 10.1002/anie.202306846

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Green Chemistry Breakthrough: New Photocatalytic Borylation ... - SciTechDaily

The mechanical side of bonding | Feature – Chemistry World

The newest bond in chemistry might not be a chemical bond at all.

The mechanical bond isnt something that you can really point to in space and say This is the bond, says David Leigh from the University of Manchester in the UK.

A mechanical bond is formed when one molecule is threaded through another, then cyclised or otherwise modified to trap the two components in a physically interlocked state like two rings in a chain link fence. Compared to the other bonds in the chemists lexicon such as the covalent bond, or even non-covalent linkages like the hydrogen bond, mechanical bonds are quite unusual.

Its a bond in that it holds two components together that would otherwise have independent degrees of freedom and fly apart, says Leigh, whose increasingly intricate interlocked molecules often incorporate multiple mechanical bonds in a single structure. But it differs from other kinds of bonds because you dont have intrinsic fixed limits to bond angles and bond lengths.

There is a lot thats different and special about the mechanical bond

Mechanical bonds are also unlike other chemical bonds in that they dont involve charge or the sharing of electrons, adds Steven Goldup, who makes mechanically bonded molecules with chemical function at the University of Birmingham, UK. The mechanical bond is literally just the inability of atoms and bonds to pass through one another, he says.

If you wanted to be really pedantic, and say that chemical bonds are about the sharing of charge between specify atoms, you probably would say it isnt a bond, Goldup adds. But the mechanical bond is a permanent interaction between two chemical entities that results in them not being able to separate which feels like a bond, Goldup says. It fulfills the macroscopic definitions of a bond.

The mechanical bonds unconventional nature including the large amplitude motions it permits between bonded parts is also its key appeal. Making mechanical bonds gives access to structures with properties that cannot easily be accessed any other way.

I think there is a lot thats different and special about the mechanical bond, says Fraser Stoddart from the University of Hong Kong, who shared the 2016 Nobel prize for his work on molecular machines enabled by mechanical bonding.

Mechanically bonded molecules typically fall into two broad categories. If a linear molecule is threaded through a macrocycle and then cyclised to form a pair of interlocked rings, the resulting structure is called a catenane. If the threaded molecule is fitted with bulky stoppers at each end which prevent it from unthreading, the result is a rotaxane.

The elaborate rotaxanes and catenanes made today can make it easy to forget that, until surprisingly recently, even the simplest interlocked structures seemed out of reach. In the 1980s and 1990s, threading molecules through each other just seemed virtually impossible, Leigh says. The structures produced in that period by Stoddart and [Jean Pierre] Sauvage were absolutely amazing.

The earliest reported example of a synthetic mechanical bond which Leigh recently revisited in his lab illustrates the challenge. The concept of the mechanically interlocked molecule had been floating around for a while when, in 1960, Edel Wasserman from Bell Telephone Laboratories, US, played the odds.

Wasserman mixed a 34-carbon macrocycle with a long chain molecule of similar size, which he then cyclised. If the long chain just happened to be threaded through the macrocycle at that moment, a mechanical bond would result. Wassermans idea was that maybe a molecule in a million will close with the thread through the ring, Stoddart says.

In a 1960 communication, Wasserman claimed he had detected traces of a mechanically interlocked pair of macrocycles made by this statistical method. But few were fully convinced by the experimental evidence Wasserman put forward.

In 2023, Leigh showed using modern spectroscopic methods that the catenane Wasserman claimed can indeed be formed by this reaction. It vindicates that Wassermans claims are justified, Stoddart says.

The milligram or so of material Wasserman made from 10 grams of starting material wasnt going to supply useful quantities of catenane, however. The next claim to catenane synthesis was even more remarkable, if no more practical. In 1964, Gottfried Schill from the University of Freiburg, Germany, published an approach called covalent templating. Using classical covalent bond chemistry he painstakingly constructed an interwoven polycyclic system, designed so that cleaving select covalent bonds in the last step of the synthesis would leave two rings held together only by a mechanical bond.

Once he had the bits and pieces linked by covalent bonds like acetyl bonds, he could hydrolyse them and he would have two interlocked rings, or a ring on a dumbbell, Stoddart says. Schill even went on to make molecular knots. It was remarkable chemistry I think he was worthy of a Nobel prize but it was 20-odd step synthesis, Stoddart says. So it was never really going to carry the day in terms of use.

The key step forward in philosophy and methodology came in 1983. Like Wasserman, Jean-Pierre Sauvage of the University of Strasbourg in France started with a mixture of a macrocyle and a linear molecule. Sauvages genius was to realize that you could use template effects to form threaded structures, says Leigh. Rather than rely upon chance association, Sauvage used metal ion templating to pre-associate the two starting materials, so that they were already in position when he cyclised the linear molecule to close the mechanical bond.

Following Sauvages advance, practical methods for making interlocked molecules, typically employing a templating or other associative interaction to hold the components in place, gradually began to appear.

The templating chemistry Sauvage adopted had its origins in macrocycle chemistry. In the 1960s, even macrocycles were extremely difficult to make, says Leigh. Being able to template things revolutionised that. This work was recognised by the 1987 chemistry Nobel, awarded to Donald Cram, Jean-Marie Lehn and Charles Pedersen.

It was an early Pedersen publication that set Stoddart on his own path toward a mechanical bonding breakthrough. In April 1967, just after starting his postdoc, Stoddart came upon Pedersens work in a brief communication. Petersen had reported the first crown ether, dibenzo-18-crown-6. I decided, being the sort of person I was, that if Peterson could make 18-membered rings, then maybe I could make even bigger and better ones, Stoddart says.

Stoddart made several macrocycles, up to 35 membered rings, from truncated cone-shaped carbohydrates called cyclodextrins. Then there was the disappointment, because they didnt do anything when we tested them, Stoddart says.

As Pedersen was already showing, however, there was plenty you could do with crown ethers. These cyclic structures could host all manner of guest ions and molecules, as Stoddart also began to explore.

It wasnt just the ether functionality of these macrocycles that could form non-covalent interactions with a guest molecule. One structure Stoddart made was a complex between dibenzo-30-crown-10 and a bipyridine platinum complex. The crystal structure revealed pipi stacking between an electron-rich benzene group on the crown ether and the electron-poor bipyridyl ligand of the platinum complex.

When the team subsequently assembled an all-organic hostguest c
omplex between a crown ether and the linear organic molecule paraquat, the pieces clicked into place. When we saw the relationship between the ring and the paraquat, it didnt take much wit to see we were on the doorstep to the mechanical bond, Stoddart says. In 1989, the team exploited the pipi interaction between an electron-rich crown ether and the electron-deficient paraquat to assemble a catenane consisting of the crown ether mechanically interlocked with a macrocycle assembled from two paraquat p-phenylene units. The yield of that first reaction was 70%. And you can now make it literally in 97% yield, Stoddart says.

A key feature of Stoddarts structures, compared to Sauvages, was the strong pipi interaction between the component parts. When Sauvage washed the copper out, that stopped the crosstalk between the rings, whereas our rings had a lot of crosstalk and that meant that we could start thinking about making switches and ultimately machines, Stoddart says. In 1991, the team made a rotaxane version, which they called a molecular shuttle. That first shuttle was a degenerate system that just went back and forth, Stoddart says. But in 1994 we de-symmetrised it, to make the first rotaxane-based molecular switch. Myriad molecular machines followed.

Switches and machines were not the only way the motion afforded by interlocked molecules could be harnessed. In the early 2000s, Kohzo Ito at the University of Tokyo, Japan, invented a mechanically interlocked polymer which he called a slide ring gel. The material consisted of long polymer chains threaded onto cyclodextrins, forming mechanical crosslinks between neighbouring polymer chains rather than the usual covalent crosslinks. When you stretch a normal polymer network, stress builds up in the crosslinks, and thats where the polymer tends to break, Goldup says. The slide ring gels allow the strain to equalize across the network, and so the network effectively gets stronger.

Slide ring coatings featuring mechanical bonds have been explored as tough smart phone screens, and used in commercial products from golf ball coatings to sound absorption materials. They have even been investigated as stretchy binders for lithium-ion battery anodes.

Early in his independent academic career at the start of the 1990s, Leigh was looking to synthesise macrocycles that would absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, when he accidentally made a catenane instead. At that time, making catenanes and rotaxanes was extremely rare, he says. Rather than Stoddarts aromatic stacking interactions or Sauvages metal ion templates, Leighs structures assembled due to hydrogen bonding. So we thought, lets see what we can do with those kinds of molecules.

From the mechanical bond assembly point of view, arguably one of Leighs key contributions is his 2006 active template approach. The active template turned mechanical bond formation from a supramolecular chemistry problem to a synthesis problem, Goldup says. The first active template systems took the idea of metal ion templates, and turned it into a catalytic process. The metal ion not only templated the association of the two components to be mechanically bonded, but catalysed the ring-closing step to form the catenane.

The latest iteration of this chemistry is the metal-free active template. Previously, most mechanically interlocked structures threaded themselves because they were designed to be the most thermodynamically stable structure, Leigh says. Those are relatively easy to make, he says. Much more interesting would be to form threaded structures that are not the most stable structure, Leigh adds. So how do you do that? Non-metal active template synthesis allows you to design molecules that will thread through each other, and the threading action causes them to react, he says. By stabilising the transition state, the threading action accelerates the cyclisation or stoppering group reaction. They just intrinsically form these higher energy mechanically interlocked structures on their own.

This chemistry is a world away from the original methods of Sauvage or Stoddart, which required many steps, were difficult to make, and required very specialist functional groups to be incorporated into the structures, Leigh adds. Now, with things like active template synthesis where the template interactions dont live on in the final product, you can make rotaxanes and catenanes out of almost anything, he says. Making catenanes and rotaxanes is now completely routine.

The intricately interwoven, multiply mechanically bonded molecules now being made illustrate how far the field has come. In the last 10 years, the level of complexity of mechanically interlocked molecules people are making, and the yields they are achieving, have gone up massively, Goldup says.

The research emphasis now is on application. A growing number of synthetic organic chemists, polymer chemists and beyond are beginning to introduce mechanical bonds into their molecules.

In the early days of mechanical bond exploration, the emphasis was on molecular machines. The mechanical bond is very mobile, and that caught peoples imagination, says Goldup, who spent several years as a postdoc in the Leigh lab making molecular machines. When Goldup started his own lab, he took a different approach. I was interested in how we can use the mechanical bond to solve chemical problems, he says.

Theres more to the mechanical bond than the motion it permits between bonded parts. A mechanical bond can be a very, very effective way of building up steric bulk, Goldup says. In a single step, making one mechanical bond results in a dramatic change in molecular shape that would take numerous covalent bond forming steps to reach. The resulting interlocked structure can be chiral even when assembled from two achiral starting structures. You can use that for sensing and catalysis, Goldup says. Were trying to solve the sort of chemical problems that everyone does in synthetic chemistry, just from a slightly different perspective.

One example is the enantioselective gold catalyst the team has developed. Gold catalysis is generally hard to render enantioselective because you have a linear coordination geometry at the gold, he says. That means the substrate binds on the opposite side of the metal to the chiral ligand. But with an interlocked molecule, the gold can be embedded within the flexible cavity created by the mechanical bond. We showed we got enantioselective catalysis, which was very exciting, Goldup says. Not because the catalyst was a world-beater, but because of the possibilities it suggests. These things are now relatively easy to build, and in theory we could use it to solve catalysis problems that cant easily be solved any other way.

How do you design and make a mechanically bonded molecule? Its essentially the same as for a complex natural product, Leigh says. The process starts with retrosynthesis with the one key difference that the molecule is being designed for function, not structure. If we do the retrosynthetic analysis and we realize that its much easier or cheaper to make the molecule if we include a methyl group, say, then well put that methyl group in, he says.

With natural product synthesis you dont have this structural flexibility. But once the molecule is made, the task is complete. With a mechanically bonded molecule, the finished product must do what it was designed for. A molecular walker that doesnt walk or a catenane that isnt threaded, those things dont tend to publish well, Leigh says.

Building a mechanically interlocked structure is now just anot
her form of organic chemistry, Leigh adds. Once you design your molecule, you go away and build it using the same tools, skills and reactions that you would use doing natural product synthesis or a drug synthesis, he says.

The active template approach has turned mechanical bonding into a form of organic chemistry, Goldup agrees. Youre not thinking about binding constants, youre not doing titrations, you just mix three components and you get the interlocked structure you intended to get, Goldup says. The chemistry is now completely accessible.

But few organic chemists so far have really embraced the mechanical bond. If I was to go into an organic synthesis lab and say Do you want to make a rotaxane? I think most people would pull a face, Goldup says. Thats partly because the properties that mechanical bonds impart, and so the reasons for making one, are still being established, Goldup adds. Thats now our job, I think, to show people why they should make them.

One synthesis group starting to explore mechanical bonding is Ramesh Jasti and his team at the University of Oregon, US. Since his postdoc days in Carolyn Bertozzis team at the Molecular Foundry in Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, US, Jasti has focused on carbon nanomaterial synthesis. The one that really struck me was carbon nanotubes, which are very difficult to synthesise with control over the structure, Jasti says. He set out to assemble short sections of nanotube bond by bond, developing ways to make a carbon nanohoop, cyclioparaphenylene (CPP), with complete atomic precision.

The idea of linking pairs of these macrocycles with a mechanical bond had floated around the group for a while before the team had a go at making one. The mechanical bond gives you the opportunity to make things that move based on stimuli, Jasti says. If you bring that into the world of carbon nanostructures, which typically have more interesting electronic and optical properties but are more static structures, how might that manipulate the properties?

Jasti used the active template approach to produce mechanically interlocked CPP molecules. I think it was probably one of the most difficult things weve done, he says. It took two exceptional graduate students pretty much their whole careers they just devoured the literature to come up with a strategy and develop it to where it is now.

The challenge was not the mechanical bond forming reaction per se. If you make some of the structures that have been well explored, I think it can be very straightforward, Jasti says. But the combination of our molecules and the mechanical bond is tricky, he says.

The effort already looks like it might pay off, however. The team has just begun to explore the properties of their mechanically bonded nanohoops, but already there are hints of unusual behaviour. For example, we know that theres very efficient energy transfer from one interlocked ring to the next, Jasti says. The team shone light at a wavelength tuned to one ring, expecting to see some light emitted by that ring and some light emitted by the other after energy transfer. We only see an emission from the second ring, which must mean that the energy transfer is really fast, he says. You could imagine one day maybe programming a system to systematically move charge or something down a long chain of these things.

The team needs more material to test out some of the other properties they are interested in, but has already developed improved methods to make mechanically bonded CPPs at larger scale. Right now, I dont even think many people have even theoretically calculated the properties for these types of materials, Jasti says. Now that they see it, I think theoreticians will dream up a lot of possibilities- and then youll see a lot of papers come out.

James Mitchell Crow is a science writer based in Melbourne, Australia

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The mechanical side of bonding | Feature - Chemistry World

Reaching into the non-covalent toolbox | Feature – Chemistry World

In 1978, a question that confounded leading chemists of the time drove Gautam Desiraju on a journey that would ultimately lead to an intriguing finding. Desiraju, then a researcher at Eastman Kodak in Rochester, US, was attending the International Conference on the Chemistry of the Organic Solid State (ICCOSS) at Brandeis University in Boston, US. Attendees were all worried about one issue, Desiraju recalls. We didnt know how molecules crystallise, he says. I felt that this was going to be the key problem.

Desiraju, now at the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore, soon re-entered academia and sought answers. With his first PhD student he explored how aromatic organic molecules, specifically cinnamic acids, formed crystals. They noticed that adding more halogen atoms to the aromatic rings changed how the molecules packed together, which they called the halogen effect. Gradually, Desirajus team realised that halogen atoms attracted each other, publishing a paper on these halogenhalogen interactions in 1989.

Chemists knew that van der Waals interactions, non-covalent attractive forces arising from fluctuations in electron clouds around atoms, influenced how molecules arrange themselves. From x-ray crystallography data, they knew how closely van der Waals forces made atoms from different molecules pack together. Desiraju and his colleagues proved that distances between halogen atoms were significantly less than expected van der Waals separations. They suspected that this arose because of a certain electrophilic nature of the halogens, says Desiraju.

An uneven distribution of electrons around halogen atoms formed electrophilic areas, which have slightly increased positive electric charge. These areas formed attractive interactions with areas of higher negative electric charge elsewhere on other halogen atoms. We found that this effect was more pronounced for iodine, less for bromine, and even less for chlorine, Desiraju explains.

Electrophilic halogens became a key part of the broader concept of halogen bonding, a term first used in 1961. This is somewhat like hydrogen bonding, another common and vital form of non-covalent attraction. In hydrogen bonding, electrophilic hydrogen atoms bonded to electron-withdrawing atoms are attracted to electron-rich atoms like oxygen and nitrogen. In halogen bonding, electrophilic regions of halogen atoms are likewise attracted to electron-rich atoms.

In the last few years, similar concepts have emerged where atoms from group 16 of the periodic table are the electrophile, known as chalcogenide bonds. Analogous interactions exist with group 15 electrophiles, known as pnictogen bonds, and with group 14 atoms, known as tetrel bonds. Another relatively exotic idea is that of weak hydrogen bonding, where the hydrogen atom is relatively weakly electrophilic, because the atom its bonded to is less electron-withdrawing, like carbon, for example. But are such bonding interactions any more than a curiosity? Exotic is often different from what is practical, Desiraju warns.

Today, these and other recently discovered forms of non-covalent bonding certainly help provide better answers to how molecules crystallise. Desiraju and other scientists can intentionally use them for crystal engineering, with applications including creating pharmaceutical co-crystals that help drug manufacturing. Non-covalent bonding types new and old drive applications spanning the entirety of chemistry, from liquid crystal displays (LCDs) to dynamic medical therapies and sensors for biological processes. Bringing different types of non-covalent bonding together can also create subtle and intricate chemical systems.

Non-covalent bonding is vital to liquid crystals, like those in the LCD screen you might be reading this on. Such systems mainly rely on van der Waals interactions that, unusually, differ in strength based on direction, explains Duncan Bruce from the University of York, UK. Known as anisotropy, this directionality arises from the shapes of molecules involved, which are typically rigid and either pencil- or disc-shaped. They also contain groups of atoms whose electrons are unevenly distributed, creating partial electric charges known as dipole moments, either permanently or temporarily. Dipole moments can also attract each other.

Together these and other properties modify van der Waals interactions, determining the directionality of a liquid crystals structure, which is part way between liquid and solid. They also influence its ability to switch to a different structure in response to a stimulus, such as temperature. There are very many different types of displays with different switching mechanisms and different visual characteristics, says Bruce.

Bruces team has developed liquid crystals that introduce hydrogen bonding, mixing alkyl-substituted pyridines, specifically stilbazoles, and phenols. Here youre taking two things, neither of which was a liquid crystal, and then hydrogen bonding them together and making something that was a liquid crystal, Bruce explains. And, in 2004, when a colleague showed him a study about halogen bonding, Bruce thought that it might be possible to exploit that too. We could take iodopentafluorobenzene and see if we can make the halogen bonding complex, he recalls. And if we could make it, would it be liquid crystal? A postdoctoral researcher on his team, Huy Loc Nguyen did some Friday afternoon experiments combining a stilbazole and iodopentafluorobenzene, which was indeed a liquid crystal.

No halogen-bonded liquid crystals have yet been commercialised because they lack long-term stability, Bruce says. Yet he stresses halogen bondings importance as one part of a toolbox of synthetic methods and interactions available to chemists, he adds. The creation and use of the toolbox is the work of many talented and imaginative people. Non-covalent interactions are fundamental to that toolbox. When you have a new means of doing something, you bring new people to the field and that is always positive as it refreshes thinking and challenges existing orthodoxies. It also sparks imagination in chemical design, which can then spin off in so many other directions.

Since 2004, Bruce has also studied halogen-bonded liquid crystals with the teams of Pierangelo Metrangolo and Giuseppe Resnati at the Polytechnic University of Milan in Italy, who are pioneers in halogen bonding research. Metrangolo notes that the first report of such a bond was published in 1863 by Frederick Guthrie from the Royal College in Mauritius. Yet nobody intensively studied halogen bonds until the 1990s. Metrangolo says that he and his colleagues have convinced people that they can be as effective as hydrogen bonds, and sometimes even better in fields as diverse as liquid crystals, crystal engineering, polymers and ion sensing.

Metrangolo believes that the most important recent findings his team has made concerning halogen bonding involve biological molecules such as amino acids and proteins. Specifically, they concern the toxic process known as oxidative stress thought to be involved in many diseases. In the best-known oxidative stress pathways, peroxides produce free radicals that cause widespread damage to cells. Metrangolo says that in the next most common oxidative stress pathway, halogens can react with and damage amino acids in proteins. We have had many results showing that proteins can be misfolded upon adding some halogens into the structure of some amino acids, he explains. The newly added halogen atoms are responsible for attractive non-covalent bonding causing the misfolding. This hel
ps understand issues like cystic fibrosis, sepsis and skin ageing, Metrangolo adds.

Anthony Daviss team at the University of Bristol in the UK reaches deep into the non-covalent bonding toolbox to make chemical systems that recognise carbohydrate molecules. They can help in technology that recognises glucose sugar molecules to manage and treat diabetes. Davis highlights several other attractive interactions his team might make use of, including electrostatic interactions between molecules carrying opposite electronic charges.

Davis often relies on clouds of electrons surrounding aromatic rings originating from double bonds between carbon atoms, known as electrons. Such molecules have a ring of negative electric charge directly around carbon atoms, surrounding a central positive charge. Stacked rings can be offset, so that the positive charge is located above a negative charge on the ring below, forming an attractive interaction. Alternatively, the clouds of electrons can attract cations or electrophilic hydrogen atoms attached to other atoms, such as oxygen or carbon atoms. Electron-rich systems can also stack alternately with electron-poor systems, which is referred to as a -donor-acceptor interaction. Perhaps surprisingly, even hydrogen atoms attached to carbon atoms can form attractive CH interactions.

Carbohydrates have got a lot of CHs and we have always tried to place surfaces against them, and its tended to work, says Davis. It will be stronger if the hydrogen is electron deficient and the oxygens in glucose presumably help in this respect. It is also more noticeable in water because it is supported by the hydrophobic effect as neither CH nor surfaces are fond of water. To get the best recognition, the Bristol team tries to make supramolecular systems combine different non-covalent interactions that complement the target they want to bind. Wed be looking for hydrogen bonding and nonpolar interactions, but CH interactions are particularly good.

Danish pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk is using Daviss teams glucose recognition technology to develop adaptive insulin molecules. These agents could circulate in the body of a person with diabetes, activating themselves when needed, rather than them requiring regular insulin injections. You have insulin with a receptor at one end and the glucose unit at the other, explains Davis. In blood low in glucose, the two ends of the molecule come together, inactivating it. But when glucose levels rise, a free sugar molecule can displace the tethered one. In this conformation, the insulin can tell the body to lower glucose levels. You produce insulin which is active when you want it to be active, Davis says.

Nature knows about non-covalent interactions much better than us

Claudia Caltagirones team at the University of Cagliari in Italy likewise develops chemical recognition systems, which contain fluorophores or chromophores that change colour or emit light when they bind ions. Including these light signals lets the Cagliari researchers detect very low ion concentrations, down to nanomolar levels, using optical cameras. They could work in real time, directly in the environment, Caltagirone explains. Her team is also working on novel soft supramolecular materials, in which the building blocks can self-assemble via non-covalent interactions, which can trap pollutants to help clear up contaminated environmental sites.

Metal cation recognition involves classic covalent coordination chemistry. But when Caltagirones team wants to capture anions of many sizes and shapes, for example environmental pollutants such as nitrate and phosphate, they reach for the non-covalent toolkit. We can have hydrogen bond formation, halogen bond formation, CHanion, stacking, and anion interactions, Caltagirone says. In our lab, we normally design neutral receptor systems that interact with anions via hydrogen bonds. However, as one example of a different interaction, in a pyrophosphate anion detection system, their fluorophore was a naphthalene with a CH well positioned to bind the anion. Beyond such tools, Caltagirone points to nature for evidence that exotic forms of non-covalent bonding can be important.

Halogen bonding is essential to the thyroid hormones thyroxine and triiodothyronine, which work only because there is iodine in there, Caltagirone stresses. Likewise, the enzyme glutathione peroxidase only works because it has a selenium atom that forms non-covalent chalcogen bonds. Nature knows about non-covalent interactions very well, probably much better than us, Caltagirone underlines. For this reason, it is worth keeping on studying them.

Such studies might enable researchers to discover further unusual non-covalent bonds, like the platinumplatinum interactions studied by Vivian Wing Wah Yam at the University of Hong Kong.

Yam became interested in interactions between platinum atoms after spending two visiting fellowships with Geoffrey Wilkinson at Imperial College London, UK, in 1991 and 1992. She was working on luminescent metal coordination complexes but felt limited by existing structures. Their colour originated because they absorbed light, making electrons move from the metal atoms at the complexes centre to ligands surrounding them. Usually such complexes relied on carbonyl ligands, which left chemists with fewer options to alter. Exploring alternative ligands, Yam found she could make platinum(II) and gold(III) complexes phosphorescent in solution, she tells Chemistry World.

Researchers initially discovered that there could be non-covalent bonding interactions between platinum atoms from solid square-planar platinum(II) complexes, Yam explains. Such complexes could exist in different coloured forms, for example red or yellow, and initially the difference wasnt clear. But then x-ray crystallography showed that platinum atoms in the red form are much closer to each other. Studies eventually showed that d- and p-orbitals from each atom overlap and mix, forming non-covalent bonding interactions that ultimately stabilise the structure that brings platinum atoms nearer to each other.

This could be much more versatile for tuning luminescence colours, Yam realised. Its a flat molecule, you can now start to stack them and play around with supramolecular assembly, she says. As one example, one platinum complex with bis(benzimidazolyl)pyridine ligands self-assembles to produce a magenta-coloured solution in water. In a mixture of 80% acetone in water, the solution is blue. In water they mainly assemble due to hydrophobic interactions, with a loose platinumplatinum interaction providing the magenta colour. In the acetone/water mixture, they assemble through tight platinumplatinum interactions turning the solution blue.

In 20 years of working on such systems, Yams team has developed many uses of non-covalent platinumplatinum interactions. The Hong Kong researchers have used the complexes luminescent qualities in organic light emitting diodes. They have also patented solution-phase sensors that change colour in the presence of molecules such as RNA or DNA. None of the potential applications that Yams team has explored has yet been commercialised, but she thinks that sensing is most likely to be practically useful.

Yams team has also taken donoracceptor interactions from the non-covalent toolbox to help control how their platinum systems assemble. The pyridine ligands that the Hong Kong researchers use stack up one on top of the other due to platinumplatinum interactions with partial - stacking. Each layer faces the opposite direction to those above and belo
w, in a head-to-tail configuration, says Yam. Modifying the ligands around the platinum atoms to incorporate donoracceptor interactions ensures all the layers align in the same direction. The difference between the strength of the platinumplatinum non-covalent bonding and the electron donoracceptor interaction completely changes the mechanism through which the system assembles too, explains Yam.

In the solid phase, non-covalent interactions have been making an impact on the pharmaceutical industry. Desiraju and other researchers have developed ways to predict the structures that molecules will form when they crystallise, answering the question posed at ICCOSS. Desiraju developed a technique known as the synthon approach, identifying building block structures that molecules come together to form before assembling as a large overall crystal. For example, simple aromatic carboxylic acids will pair up to form simple hydrogen-bonded dimers 7080% of the time. Loading more functional groups onto the molecules brings together different interactions that create preferred patterns. Such knowledge enables scientists formulating drugs in the pharmaceutical industry to design crystals that incorporate ingredients specifically intended to help their products dissolve and travel through patients bodies. Today fewer than 10 drugs have used such capabilities, but it has the potential to be a really big practical application, Desiraju says.

People want to find new interactions. The future will tell whether these have an impact or not

Most interesting of all, for Desiraju, is the potential to bring together three or four molecules in a single cocrystal for each of their properties. But creating a crystal comprising building blocks containing one of each of the molecules is surprisingly difficult, Desiraju explains. Suppose I have four molecules ABCD, and suppose interactions of the type A to B, B to C and C to D, are all strong, he says. You will just get binaries AB, BC and CD. To get more molecules to come together as ternary or quaternary crystals requires non-covalent bonds that are graded in strength. For a ternary compound ABC, A and B could experience the strongest interaction, like conventional strong hydrogen bonds. B and C could experience the second strongest interaction, which might be a halogen bond. Finally, the attraction between C and A could be weakest, such as a weak hydrogen bond. A could have medicinal properties, B could boost solubility, and C could help permeability, Desiraju suggests.

Cocrystals also provide a specific example of how halogen bonding can be useful, Metrangolo adds. He highlights the molecule iodopropynyl butylcarbamate, which is often used a preservative in cosmetics, paints and coatings. Its melting point is relatively low, around 66C, which makes it very sticky and hard for manufacturers to use. The iodine atom in the molecule is very electron poor, meaning that it can halogen bond with chlorine atoms in calcium chloride. Metrangolo, Resnati and colleagues have patented the resulting cocrystal of the two, which melts at around 82C and is therefore much easier to handle. Metrangolos team is now working to develop co-crystals of halogen-based chemotherapy drugs used to treat cancer, to make them soluble in water as opposed to dimethylsulfoxide, their current solvent. Halogen bonding for improving the properties of pharmaceutical compounds is still under-explored, he says.

With so many different types of non-covalent bonding possible, some scientists are looking to find a way to organise them, Metrangolo adds. It is nowadays very well accepted that the interactions are a property of the atoms, he says. People are speaking of a periodic table of interactions. Making their strengths and weaknesses obvious could be important, because Metrangolo is uncertain that every non-covalent bonding interaction will prove useful. People want to find new interactions, he says. The future will tell whether these have an impact or not.

Yet even when the application of a non-covalent bonding interaction is unclear, we should have patience, says Davis. One member of his team, Tiddo Mooibroek, is now actively exploring an exotic non-covalent bonding interaction. Hes looking at tetrel bonding involving carbon atoms in the solvent tetrahydrofuran and 3,3-dimethyl-tetracyanocyclopropane. This work reminds him of when he first read about halogen bonding decades ago. Davis did rather think How is anyone ever going to use this? he explains. Its beginning to look like it will be rather useful, particularly in the area of anion binding and anion transport across cell membranes. That could have a variety of useful effects, maybe antibiotics, maybe anti-cancer, or cystic fibrosis, where natural anion transport isnt functioning properly. In that area, halogen bonding does look like it might be really rather useful. The main message is dont write anything off in the early stages.

Andy Extance is a science writer based in Exeter, UK

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