Thursday, June 20, 2013

Hydrogen: A Metal?

Had a bit of fun this morning playing with Scientific American's new interactive Periodic Table.

Most of the entries were spot-on, and the link-backs to Nature Chemistry's IYE series (now free!) certainly help a lot. Just one small quibble:


Doesn't that say "alkali metal?" Although I appreciate that might be true at incredibly high pressures (thanks, Dr. Eisen, for link), what about everyday, ordinary hydrogen gas?

Protons? Sure, they're sort of the classic metal-though-not-a-metal. But, to be fair, you can make lots of things behave like metals (see: O, Br, I, C, Si...) that normally wouldn't.

I'd love to hear some spirited debate in the comments, and appreciate any Sci Am editorial responses.

Update: Stu Cantrill sends over this Nature News article covering Eremets' and Troyan's work.

Neil Withers jumps in with a contradictory example, also from Nature.

Perks

There's a pithy NY Times round-up of the free food and services NYC tech start-ups lavish on their employees. (SPOILER - they sound awesome):
"Within my first week of working at a start-up, I acquired a gut. The reason was obvious: there was free food everywhere, it was delicious and I was nervous . . .on Monday, warm cookies from the Upper West Side bakery Levain appeared in the kitchen. Buttercream cupcakes followed; apparently it was somebody’s birthday. (It is always somebody’s birthday.) At noon, employees gathered for a catered lunch of barbecue. Two hours later, a Pinkberry station rolled into the office with the full battery of toppings."
The author raises the stakes in each paragraph, moving from free food to beer, coffee, yogurts, fancy juices, then up to concert tickets, in-office manicures, nap times, and - I am not making this up - a room full of puppies.

Wowzers.

Back in my day (in *cough* late '90s small biotech), I distinctly recall watching the first Keurigs pump out decadent self-serve coffee pods, and thinking how lucky we were to have such a great gizmo. Later, I toured a boom-times GSK, noting agog the subsidized food, dry cleaning, in-house gym, etc.

My favorite quote from the article comes courtesy of tech titan Nolan Bushnell, Atari founder (emphasis mine):
"Mr. Bushnell of Atari, a veteran of the start-up world, was asked where he draws the line between 'productive perk' and 'wanton decadence.' His answer: Well, he doesn’t.
'I’ve often felt that it is somehow wrong to have an engineer spend any time at all scrubbing his own toilet,' he said. 'It sounds elitist, but these people are highly important to the economy and to the company. Offering maid service to them as a perk makes total sense.'"
Amazing. Would that all start-ups felt the same way.*

*By my count, I've scrubbed my toilet at least 40 times since starting at my current job. Par for the course. I've heard of start-ups with trash and mop duty, too. 

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Summer Conference Blues

(Warning: Major #FirstWorldProblems grumbling ahead...regularly-scheduled content resumes tomorrow)

I want to go to a conference. Very, very badly.

It's been some time since I've met my scientific brethren to talk, dine, listen, exchange ideas, and play random pickup sports.

I miss you all terribly!

I've never actually been on one.* Would love it.
Source: Forbes.com
Young professors stew in that perfect mix of nerves, excitement, and exhaustion as they're expected to fly here and there to give talks, consult, and generally build their tenure case. Big Pharma, too, makes a point of sending their best out into the world to scope out new drug leads or build academic connections for future hiring.

Tiny companies? No travel budget. No conferencing. Do not pass Go, don't collect that per diem.

It's a Catch-22 of sorts - Without conferencing, you don't meet new folks who could potentially get you the kind of jobs that would send you to conferences. Rinse, repeat.

So, dear readers, I'm wondering: Does anyone know of industry awards one can apply for for travel / registration assistance? I'm aware of ACS' Young Investigator Symposium, and I think some industry-types get invited to Lindau.

Help me think of a few more?

*To clarify, I've never been on an Airbus, or flown to a posh international destination. I've certainly been on planes enough, see: job search.

Wordle Challenge 3: Nobel Edition

Did you have fun playing Wordle Chem Challenge One and Two?

This one kicks up the difficulty another notch. I've searched through the Nobel Prize website, and grabbed the press release / presentation speech (pre-1972) for several laureates. Can you piece together who's who?

(Note: As in past challenges, I've stripped out the names of the winners, as well as certain non-helpful terms - URL, website, etc.)

Entry 1

Entry 2

Entry 3
Entry 4

Entry 5
Entry 6
Entry 7
Entry 8
Entry 9

Think you know 'em? Leave answers in the comments!

Just Turn the Crank...

Readers: Seen any more "industrialized" abstracts? Send 'em my way!

Feb 2016:

Chem Rev. 2016


Angew. Chem. 2016, ASAP


August 2015:

Angew. Chem. 2015, ASAP

Chem Sci 2015, 2827

Chem. Rev. 2015, ASAP


Sept 2014:

J. Org. Chem. 2014, 8263

Acc. Chem. Res. 2014, 1349


July 2014:

Et tu, ACS?

Source: Acc Chem Res, 2014

Source: ACS Catalysis, 2014

Source: Chem Rev. 2014

Update: June 2014 - Anybody know when it became popular to depict cascade / multi-step reactions as Rube Goldberg devices?

Source: Acc Chem Res 2014, ASAP

Source: Synthesis, 2010, 675-691

Source: Organometallics 2014, ASAP
Source: Acc Chem Res. 2014,  ASAP

Update: April 2014 - Found two in just the last two weeks!
(This is fun...anyone seen any others?)

Source: JACS 2014, ASAP

Source: JACS 2014, 4492.

***

I know we're only six months into 2013, but I'm calling it:
GEARS are the "hot" item to have in your graphical abstract this summer!


Source: Angew. Chem. 2013, ASAP

Source: Chem Rev. 2013, ASAP

Source: JACS 2013, 118-121


Source: Chem. Sci. 2013, Advance Article


Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Another Wordle Challenge

Did you have fun playing the first Wordle chemist challenge?

I recall garnering some good-natured criticism, when I counted papers, for only including male chemists in the first go-'round. In the spirit of equality, here's three more Wordles for well-known female organic chemists!

Entry 6
Entry 7
Entry 8
Submit your answers in the comments!

A Wordle Challenge

BRSM wrote a fun post today analyzing my blog's content using Wordle, an infotainment app for gauging word frequency (really? Really.)

I thought I'd extend the concept a bit, and turn Wordle loose on some unsuspecting academics. Below, I've shown five graphics culled from the "Publications" page of five well-known synthetic organic chemists - minus a few* common words.

I've removed the main author's name from each, but can you still guess who they are?

Entry 1
Entry 2

Entry 3

Entry 4
Entry 5
Leave a guess in the comments...if you dare!

*Supporting Information, Chem, Author name, pdf