Skip to content

Commit

Permalink
Update characterization.mdx
Browse files Browse the repository at this point in the history
  • Loading branch information
nicolejung authored Oct 22, 2023
1 parent 4944651 commit 54c7fdf
Showing 1 changed file with 5 additions and 5 deletions.
10 changes: 5 additions & 5 deletions docs/repo/details_standards/characterization.mdx
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ sidebar_position: 1
---

**How to find and apply information for required standards in chemotion repository**<br />
The <i>page general topics</i> describes the overall idea of how to deal with data in chemotion repository. This page does not contain details on how to deal with analytical data or how to describe certain types of data. This detailed information can be found at the page "details and standards for analyses" and subpages belonging to it. It does not give information on the data files and types that are supported or need to be provided - this information is part of the section [data types](files).
The <i>page general topics</i> describes the overall idea of how to deal with data in chemotion repository. This page does not contain details on how to deal with analytical data or how to describe certain types of data. This detailed information can be found at the page "details and standards for analyses" and subpages belonging to it. It does not give information on the data files and types that are supported or need to be provided - this information is part of the section.

## Scope

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ Examples: the product was obtained in 12% yield or 5% methanol in water. Others:
- Use the period as the decimal point, never a comma. Use numerals before and after a decimal point. 0.25 (not .25) 78.0 or 78 (not 78.)
- For ranges in scientific notation, retain all parts of all numbers or avoid ambiguity by use of parentheses or other enclosing marks. 9.2 × 10–3 to 12.6 × 10–3 or (9.2–12.6) × 10–3 (not 9.2 to 12.6 × 10–3)
- Leave a space before and after mathematical operators that function as verbs or conjunctions; that is, they have numbers on both sides or a symbol for a variable on one side and a number on the other.
<i><b>Examples:</i></b> 20 ± 2% 3.24 ± 0.01 4 × 5 cm 8 × 10–4 k ≥ 420 s–1 p < 0.01 Tg = 176 °C.
Examples: 20 ± 2% 3.24 ± 0.01 4 × 5 cm 8 × 10–4 k ≥ 420 s–1 p < 0.01 Tg = 176 °C.
Exception 1 Leave no space around mathematical operators in subscripts and superscripts. ∆Hn–1 Eλ>353 M(x+y)+
Exception 2 Leave no space around a slash (a/b), a ratio colon (1:10), or a centered dot (PM·V).
- Use an en dash to express “to”: 12–20 mins, 10–13 mL.
Expand All @@ -59,9 +59,9 @@ exception 2 Use the preferred unit of a discipline, even when the numbers requir
- Use italic type for positional, stereochemical, configurational, and descriptive structural prefixes when they appear with the chemical name or formula. Use a hyphen to separate them from the chemical name. Examples: <i>abeo, ac, altro, amphi, anti, antiprismo, ar, arachno, as, asym, c, catena, cis, cisoid, closo, cyclo, d, dodecahedro, E, endo, erythro, exo, facgem, hexahedro, hexaprismo, hypho, icosahedro, klado, l, m, M, mer, meso, n, nido, o, octahedro, p, P, pentaprismo, quadro, r, R, R∗, rel, retro, ribo, s, S, S∗, sec, sn, sym, syn, t, tert, tetrahedro, threo, trans, transoid, triangulo, triprismo, uns, vic, xylo, Z</i>.
- Do not capitalize prefixes that are shown here as lowercase, even at the beginning of a sentence or in a title and never use lower case for those that are written in capital letters. Enclose the prefixes E, R, R∗, S, S∗, and Z in parentheses. <i>anti</i>-bicyclo[3.2.1]octan-8-amine, <i>ar</i>-chlorotoluene, <i>cis</i>-diamminedichloroplatinum, <i>cyclo</i>-hexasulfur, c-S6; (<i>E,E</i>)-2,4-hexadienoic acid; <i>m</i>-ethylpropylbenzene; <i>o</i>-dibromobenzene, <i>p</i>-aminoacetanilide; (<i>S</i>)-2,3-dihydroxypropanoic acid; 5-<i>sec</i>-butylnonane.
- Multiplying affixes are integral parts of the chemical name; they are set in normal type and are always closed up to the rest of the name (without hyphens). Use hyphens only to set off intervening locants or descriptors. Use enclosing marks (parentheses, brackets, or braces) to ensure clarity or to observe other recommended nomenclature conventions. Multiplying prefixes include the following:
-- hemi, mono, di, tri, tetra, penta, hexa, hepta, octa, ennea, nona, deca, deka, undeca, dodeca, etc.
-- semi, uni, sesqui, bi, ter, quadri, quater, quinque, sexi, septi, octi, novi, deci, etc.
-- bis, tris, tetrakis, pentakis, hexakis, heptakis, octakis, nonakis, decakis, etc. <br />
- hemi, mono, di, tri, tetra, penta, hexa, hepta, octa, ennea, nona, deca, deka, undeca, dodeca, etc.
- semi, uni, sesqui, bi, ter, quadri, quater, quinque, sexi, septi, octi, novi, deci, etc.
- bis, tris, tetrakis, pentakis, hexakis, heptakis, octakis, nonakis, decakis, etc. <br />
Examples: 3,4′-bi-2-naphthol; 2,2′-bipyridine; bis(benzene)chromium(0); 1,4-bis(3-bromo-1- oxopropyl)piperazine; 1,3-bis(diethylamino)propane; di-tert-butyl malonate dichloride.


0 comments on commit 54c7fdf

Please sign in to comment.