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         Computational Chemistry:     more books (100)
  1. A Handbook of Computational Chemistry: A Practical Guide to Chemical Structure and Energy Calculations by Tim Clark, 1985-07-24
  2. Computational Organometallic Chemistry by Thomas R. Cundari, 2001-03-16
  3. Computational Chemistry: An Introduction to Numerical Methods by A.C. Norris, 1981-09-09
  4. Relativistic Electronic Structure Theory, Volume 14: Part 2. Applications (Theoretical and Computational Chemistry) (Pt. 2)
  5. Relativistic Electronic Structure Theory - Fundamentals, Volume 11 (Theoretical and Computational Chemistry)
  6. Computational studies of RNA and DNA (Challenges and Advances in Computational Chemistry and Physics)
  7. Computational Theoretical Organic Chemistry (NATO Science Series C: (closed))
  8. Practical Aspects of Computational Chemistry: Methods, Concepts and Applications
  9. Computational Inorganic and Bioinorganic Chemistry (EIC Books)
  10. Computational Quantum Chemistry: An Interactive Introduction to Basis Set Theory by Charles M. Quinn, 2002-04-04
  11. Many-Electron Densities and Reduced Density Matrices (Mathematical and Computational Chemistry)
  12. Single-Ion Solvation: Experimental and Theoretical Approaches to Elusive Thermodynamic Quantities (RSC Theoretical and Computational Chemistry Series) by Philippe Hunenberger, Maria Reif, 2011-01-05
  13. Recent Advances in QSAR Studies: Methods and Applications (Challenges and Advances in Computational Chemistry and Physics)
  14. The Basics of Theoretical and Computational Chemistry by Bernd Michael Rode, Thomas S. Hofer, et all 2007-03-27

41. CCL Home
A resource for computational chemists. Discussions on chemistry software, data, conferences, jobs, quantum chemistry, molecular mechanics, molecular dynamics, QSAR, molecular graphics, molecular modeling, and associated archives
http://www.ccl.net/chemistry/
Computational Chemistry made SIMPLE http://www.ccl.net/chemistry/index.shtml CCL Home About CCL Rules Instructions Supporting CCL ...
Chemistry, 2nd Ed

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Welcome to the CCL Website!
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The Computational Chemistry List (CCL) was established on January 11, 1991, as an independent electronic forum for chemistry researchers and educators from around the world. If you want it to continue, please support it with your participation in discussions contributing files to the CCL archives use of its paid services and becoming its supporting member It is estimated that more than 3000 members in more than 50 countries are reading CCL messages regularly. Normally, the traffic does not exceed 20 messages a day. You can examine all past messages The discussions cover all aspects of computational chemistry; however, before posting, contributors are asked to read the instructions and regulations . Please SUPPORT CCL to ensure its continuing service to the community.

42. Computational Chemistry - Chemistry: Foundations And Applications | HighBeam Res
Computational Chemistry find Chemistry Foundations and Applications articles. div id= bedoc-text h1Computational Chemistry/h1 hr/ pIn 1929, shortly after the emergence
http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G2-3400900125.html

43. Computational Chemistry And Organic Synthesis
A tutorial intended for experimental organic chemists, with emphasis on computational methods for locating and characterizing transition states.
http://www.cmbi.ru.nl/tutorials/cheminf/mopac/comp.html
Computational Chemistry and Organic Synthesis
A course to introduce computational chemistry to synthetic-organic chemists, who would like to understand why they got the product they got and not (always) the compound they wanted. With emphasis on the Transition State (TS): how to construct it, characterize it, and compare it to other alternatives. Starting with conformational changes, and ending with 'real' reactions.
(AMPAC5.0 GUI graphics)
Introduction
At the CAOS/CAMM Center we noticed an increasing interest, from synthetic chemists, for molecular modelling as a tool, next to spectroscopic and other physical techniques.
Mostly what they are after is an explanation for experimental product ratios. This observation inspired us to compose a course on this subject, with emphasis on a practical approach and a minimum of mathematics or theory. Molecular modelling is interpreted here as the interactive combination of visualization and computational techniques, with emphasis on the former. These days computational chemistry is more or less the same, but with emphasis on the latter. Visualization has become an integral part of almost all computational methods.

44. Gordon Research Conferences - Conference Program
August 29 September 3, 2010 Les Diablerets Conference Center Les Diablerets, Switzerland
http://www.grc.org/programs.aspx?year=2010&program=compchem

45. CCCBDB Computational Chemistry Comparison And Benchmark Database
NIST database of small molecules with well established heat of formation, including results from many computational methods, including semiempirical and ab initio with various basis sets.
http://srdata.nist.gov/cccbdb/Default.htm

46. Dr Garrett M. Morris
Protein-ligand Docking, structures, bioinformatics, computational chemistry, and drug design resources.
http://www.scripps.edu/mb/olson/people/gmm/
Docking Structures Drug Design Bioinformatics ... MacSlash
Is ditchwater dull? Naturalists with microscopes have told me that it teems with quiet fun. G. K. CHESTERTON, The Spice of Life Molecular Docking
Three-dimensional molecular structure is one of the foundations of structure-based drug design . Often, data are available for the shape of a protein and a drug separately, but not for the two together. Docking is the process by which two molecules fit together in 3D space. The program AutoDock was originally written in FORTRAN-77 in 1990 by David S. Goodsell here in Arthur J. Olson's laboratory. It was designed to perform automated docking of ligands (small molecules like a candidate drug) to their macromolecular targets (usually proteins, sometimes DNA). In 1991, I took over the work on AutoDock. My work focuses on adding new science to AutoDock, including better search methods and parameters, better empirical free energy scoring functions, and on applying AutoDock to real-world problems in medicinal chemistry, in particular HIV-1 protease inhibitors. I have also applied AutoDock to the problem of protein-protein docking, notably to HIV neutralizing antibody b12 to HIV gp120. AutoDock is free to academics, and includes source code.
The AutoDock Home Page - software for automated docking and scoring of flexible ligands to receptors.

47. Cambridge University Silicon Graphics Teaching Laboratory
An outline of a course in computational chemistry. Includes exercises in conformational search, molecular dynamics, visualization, and databases.
http://www.ch.cam.ac.uk/cil/SGTL/

48. CCCBDB Computational Chemistry Comparison And Benchmark Database
Compares experimental properties of small gas phase molecules with properties computed using a variety of ab initio methods.
http://srdata.nist.gov/cccbdb/

49. Computational Chemistry Links
Some resources on computational chemistry This page contains a few links to some computational chemistry resources that are available on the web.
http://www.zyvex.com/nanotech/compChemLinks.html
Some resources on computational chemistry
This page contains a few links to some computational chemistry resources that are available on the web. Reviews in Computational Chemistry by Lipkowitz and Boyd is an excellent series of books which does just that. Unlike most review series, it includes introductory and tutorial as well as more advanced material. The World-Wide Web Virtual Library: Chemistry is an excellent starting place to look for any chemistry related information. A more general page of links to chemistry resources QCPE (The Quantum Chemistry Program Exchange) provides a wide range of computational chemistry software, often free. NIH has a page on molecular modeling and has a guide to software. An online-text which discusses aspects of quantum mechanics, the Born-Oppenheimer approximation , and molecular mechanics. I've had some direct experience with a few software packages: MSI's Cerius 2 provided an excellent but relatively expensive package which ran on several commercial platforms (SGI, RS6000, and the like). Hypercube's Hyperchem under Windows on the PC provides excellent capabilities at the price.

50. AIChE Computational Chemistry Discussion Group
Academic research groups Online courses and texts Commercial and free software Other useful sites Journals, technical reports, and review articles
http://www.ecs.umass.edu/che/am3/AIChE97.html
Computational Chemistry
in Chemical Engineering:
An AIChE Discussion Group
Academic research groups
On-line courses and texts

Commercial and free software

Other useful sites
... Computational Chemistry and Its Industrial Applications ," 1996 AIChE meeting
1995 AIChE meeting report
Contacts for information:
Ken Cox (Ohio State University, coxk@kcgl1.eng.ohio-state.edu
Phil Westmoreland (University of Massachusetts Amherst, westm@ecs.umass.edu
Many companies have on-going efforts that use computational chemistry to accelerate development of new specialty materials and to obtain needed thermochemistry and kinetics. By "computational chemistry," we include:
    Molecular mechanics, Molecular dynamics, Semi-empirical and ab initio quantum mechanics, and Quantum reaction-rate theories
used to obtain transport, thermochemical, kinetic, and mechanical properties. Examples of current applications are development of adhesives and coatings, adsorbents, enzymes for detergents, halon replacements, homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysts, pharmaceutical drugs, stabilized emulsions, and structured polymers. Success or the lack of success has depended on technical and institutional features, such as:

51. חברת אאוטסורסינג המספקת פתרונות בתחום הכימיה החישובית
Freelance outsourcing company which provides computational chemistry services within the fields of pharmaceutics and general organic and inorganic chemistry.
http://www.molecusource.com
English
Molecusource - outsourcing solutions in computational chemistry
ברוכים הבאים לאתר חברת Molecusource
.Molecusource Molecusource עוסקת במתן פתרונות בתחום הכימיה החישובית בענפי הכימיה השונים.

52. Computational Chemistry : Article : Nature Reviews Drug Discovery
Identifying molecules that might fulfil the stringent criteria necessary to become a drug from the vast number of possibilities has often been likened to searching for a needle
http://nature.com/uidfinder/10.1038/nrd2271
Login Search This journal All of Nature.com Advanced search Journal home Archive Careers and Recruitment Full Text
Careers and Recruitment
Nature Reviews Drug Discovery (March 2007) doi
Computational chemistry
Top of page
Abstract
Identifying molecules that might fulfil the stringent criteria necessary to become a drug from the vast number of possibilities has often been likened to searching for a needle in a haystack. Two computational chemists with a focus on drug discovery, Yvonne Martin and Brian Shoichet, discuss what attracts them to working on strategies to cut the haystack down to size. Yvonne Martin Recently retired as Senior Volwiler Research Fellow, Advanced Technology Division of Drug Discovery, Global Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Abbott, Chicago, Illinois, USA. This kind of success with models is an aspect of her role that Martin finds particularly rewarding. "Nevertheless, it is frustrating that we don't yet have computational methods that solve most of the problems faced by a medicinal chemist," says Martin. "For example, we wish computational methods could accurately forecast the affinity of a ligand for a protein, or accurately predict the water solubility of compounds." These problems are sure to keep computational chemists occupied in the future, and there are plenty more ambitious goals if they are addressed, such as predicting how a compound would affect a network of proteins. Brian Shoichet Professor of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of California, San Francisco, USA.

53. HBar Solutions - Computational Chemistry And Molecular Modeling
Offers consulting, contract research and customized software within computational chemistry and molecular and materials modeling and simulations.
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54. Chem 126 Main Page: Computational Chemistry Course At UCSB
Lecturer Dr. Kalju Kahn Office PSBN 2623, Phone 893-6157 E-mail kalju@chem.ucsb.edu, Website http//www.chem.ucsb.edu/~kalju. Mission statement
http://www.chem.ucsb.edu/~kalju/chem126/
Chem 126
Computational Chemistry
Fall 2008
Lecturer:
Dr. Kalju Kahn
Office: PSB-N 2623, Phone: 893-6157
E-mail: kalju@chem.ucsb.edu, Website: http://www.chem.ucsb.edu/~kalju
Mission statement
The course focuses on learning the principles of computational chemistry and computer-based molecular design. Both molecular mechanical and quantum mechanical models are covered. Students will learn a variety of commonly used techniques, such as geometry optimization, location of transition states, conformational analysis, and prediction of molecular and spectroscopic properties. Students will learn basics of implementing key algorithms, such as Newton-Rhapson minimization, and normal mode analysis of vibrational motions. Students also will become familiar with different software packages, including MOLDEN for general model building, Gaussian PC GAMESS , and Dalton for quantum chemical calculations, and BOSS for liquid simulations. Students who complete the course are expected to be able to ask questions that can be solved with modern computational approaches and choose right computational tools to assist in their current or future research.
Course Materials
Syllabus General information about the course PDF Last Years Computational Chemistry 126 by Dr. Kirtman: 2007

55. Drug Discovery And Rational Drug Design For R&D - OribasePharma - Innovative Mol
Computational chemistry based company providing chemoinformatic tools and services for scientists in pharmaceuticals and agrochemicals.
http://www.novadecision.com/
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OriBase Pharma is involved in all drug discovery stages from hit identification to lead optimization and delivery of new drug candidates in a quick and cost effective manner. OriBase Pharma has worked on a wide range of therapeutic target classes and has a specific expertise in kinase inhibitors design. With our innovative approach and

56. Computational Chemistry For Chemistry Educators
Oct. 6, 2008 ג€” The materials on this site have been updated! View the new content Labs using WebMO Updated Lectures
http://www.computationalscience.org/ccce/
Location : CCCE home Oct. 6, 2008 Welcome to Computational Chemistry for Chemistry Educators (CCCE)! This site is the companion Web-based resource for the Molecular Modeling workshop offered through the National Computational Science Institute (NCSI) , funded in part by the National Science Foundation (NSF) . This page describes the course content, the target audience, and the learning objectives. Course Description Courses Objectives You can also go directly to the Course by selecting your session using the drop down menu. Shodor Education Foundation, Inc. Introduction to Computational Chemistry Basis Sets Choice of Theorectical Method Single Point Energies and Geometry Optimizations Electron Densities, Electrostatic Potentials, and Reactivity Predictions Modeling in Solution Computing Spectroscopic and Thermochemical Properties Quantitative Structure Activity/Property Relationships (QSAR/QSPR) Transition States Computational Study of System Dynamics Biochemical Applications of Computational Chemistry Developed by
The Shodor Education Foundation, Inc.

57. CUC3 Home Page
Condensed matter science, surface science and statistical mechanics of complex and disordered systems.
http://www-theor.ch.cam.ac.uk/
University of Cambridge Department of Chemistry Theoretical Chemistry
The Cambridge University Centre for Computational Chemistry groups theoretically-minded members of the Cambridge Department of Chemistry in premises on the recently refurbished third floor of the Department. Around 50 members, comprising staff, research fellows, postdoctoral associates, postgraduate students, and visiting scientists from all over the world, work on many aspects of theoretical and computational chemistry. ab initio MD, as well as global optimization algorithms for the exploration of multi-dimensional energy surfaces.
Aqueous CuII ion showing highest occupied molecular orbital. Instantaneous snapshot sampled from a spin polarized Car-Parrinello simulation. Image provided by Michiel Sprik
Information provided by webadmin@theor.ch.cam.ac.uk
Last modified on Tuesday, 17-Nov-2009 14:22:20 GMT

58. Masters Degree In Computational Chemistry
Masters Degree in Computational Chemistry Michigan State University. A. OVERVIEW The Masters Degree in Computational Chemistry offered by the Michigan State University
http://www.cem.msu.edu/~compchem/
Masters Degree in Computational Chemistry
Michigan State University A. OVERVIEW B. Admission Requirements
Candidates for the M.S. program in Computational Chemistry are expected to have completed the equivalent of a Bachelor's degree in Chemistry. Deficiencies in specific areas at the undergraduate level must be removed by passing undergraduate courses in those areas. C. Qualification Exams Upon entrance to the graduate program, all students who have not completed the GRE Advanced Test in Chemistry with a grade in the 75th or higher percentile (or with a raw score of at least 700) are required to take Qualification Examinations. These cover basic facts and concepts at an undergraduate level in the following four areas of Chemistry: Analytical, Inorganic, Organic, and Physical. The grading of these examinations is on a Qualify (Q)/No Qualify (N) basis. The examination results are used to assess academic preparation in Chemistry, and to assist in developing a useful curriculum for each student. To be certified for the Masters degree a student must earn a Q grade on the qualification exams in any two areas or earn one Q grade on the qualification exams and earn a 3.0 or higher in a designated course. D. Representative Course Sequence

59. Computational Chemistry Group Homepage
Ab initio quantum chemistry and computational thermochemistry.
http://www.nist.gov/compchem/

60. WebMO - Computational Chemistry On The WWW
WebMO is a free World Wide Webbased interface to computational chemistry packages. WebMO can be installed on the following platforms Windows 2000, XP
http://www.webmo.net/

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