[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[Send comment to list secretary]
[Reply to list (subscribers only)]
Re: CIF dicsussion on chemical structure
- To: corecifchem@iucr.org
- Subject: Re: CIF dicsussion on chemical structure
- From: Peter Murray-Rust <pm286@cam.ac.uk>
- Date: Thu, 14 Oct 2004 20:28:13 +0100
- Cc: smt40@cam.ac.uk
I had an extremely good visit to Chester and many thanks to PeterS BrianMcM and others. In summary I ran CIFSAXDOM and CIF2CML over this months ActaE CIFs and found very good conversions to chemistry. Even with disorder (which had worried me) the author/editor curation was good. By taking _atom_site_disorder_group="." or ="1" all structures gave reasonable formulae. The main problems are: - symmetry. We are going to test whether using the additional bonds, angles and torsions we can normally generate the symmetry related atoms - disorder. we have to assume the connectivity of disorder groups is constant or that the first one is definitive - charges. Almost all structures had formal charges in the formulae and we shall test this out. - hydrogens. We did not see any missing hydrogens We have not yet mapped formulae onto disjoint moieties. With this level of quality it should be possible to define good protocols for many systems. I am on the road shortly but hope to find time to create some exemplars. I note that the _atom_site_disorder_* fields are not crystallographic but chemical annotations (by and large they do not affect the interpretation of the diffraction experiment unless they are used for librational analysis. Is that fair? If so, I would propose that we use other fields in _atom_site for chemical annotation. here is the first question we have to answer: - what information is given by the diffraction and its analysis; and what by the chemistry given from elsewhere? We can envisage: - elementTypes unknown chemically but modelled to fit the diffraction - elementTypes known chemically but unused in the diffraction model (e.g. trace elements or very light ones) - spin states known chemically but undetected in diffraction. - (possibly) fluxional behaviour which affects the chemical description of the molecule. The chemist may value a dynamic description rather than the fixed positions returned by crystallography. To accomplish this I this is valuable to be able to create additional annotation in the _atom_site table and to have atoms in there which do not, or cannot contribute to the diffraction (i.e. occupancy = 0.0) Does this look reasonable? In haste P. Peter Murray-Rust Unilever Centre for Molecular Informatics Chemistry Department, Cambridge University Lensfield Road, CAMBRIDGE, CB2 1EW, UK Tel: +44-1223-763069 _______________________________________________ coreCIFchem mailing list coreCIFchem@iucr.org http://scripts.iucr.org/mailman/listinfo/corecifchem
[Send comment to list secretary]
[Reply to list (subscribers only)]
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: CIF dicsussion on chemical structure (David Brown)
- Prev by Date: Re: CIF dicsussion on chemical structure
- Next by Date: Re: CIF dicsussion on chemical structure
- Prev by thread: Re: CIF dicsussion on chemical structure
- Next by thread: Re: CIF dicsussion on chemical structure
- Index(es):