A New Unifying Biparametric Nomenclature that Spans all of Chemistry

As a product of historical development, there are different, un systems of nomenclature for “inorganic chemistry”, “organic chemistry”, “polymer chemistry”, “natural products chemistry”, etc. With each new discovery in the laboratory, as well as each new theoretical proposal for a chemical, the lines that traditionally have sepad these “distinct” subsets of matter continually grow more blurred. This lack of uniformity in characterizing and naming chemicals increases the communication difficulties between differently trained chemists, as well as other scientists, and greatly impedes progress. With the set of known chemicals numbering over 42,000,000 (in Chemical Abstracts’ data base) and continually growing (about 2,000 new additions every day), the desirability for a unified system for naming all chemicals simultaneously grows. Moreover, in order to meet the requirements of dispa groups of scientists, and of society in general, the name assigned to a given chemical should, not only uniquely describe that substance, but also should be a part of a readily recognizable order for the entire field. For these purposes, a topology-based “bi-parametric” system of nomenclature is herein proposed. - In this book, a new nomenclature system is proposed
Elsevier Science 0444516859 Edition – 2004-05-20 PDF 324 pages 9.79 MB Rapidshare & Megaupload
- The new nomenclature is applicable to a three dimensional world, and is internally consistent
- This nomenclature unifies ALL branches of chemistry, removing the need for various presently existing sets of rules
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