Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Chemistry/Archive 35

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MOS question

The chemistry MOS says the following about line equations:

Avoid the use of <math> notation: the existing character set is adequate to enter reaction data

I found an article using (i.e., <math>\rightleftharpoons</math>) and I tried to find a replacement among the character sets offered (above and below the edit box). Am I just looking in the wrong place for this? Or is that type of reaction diagram deprecated? Thank. Ian (Wiki Ed) (talk) 20:28, 18 March 2015 (UTC)

Try {{eqm}}. It works by inserting an image that is matched to the normal fontsize, so it's not truely "the existing character set", but it sure acts as if it were in many standard uses. DMacks (talk) 20:33, 18 March 2015 (UTC)
Thanks! Ian (Wiki Ed) (talk) 21:05, 18 March 2015 (UTC)
Any reason not to use the unicode ⇌ ? Christian75 (talk) 08:07, 19 March 2015 (UTC)
That's U+21CC RIGHTWARDS HARPOON OVER LEFTWARDS HARPOON (&Equilibrium;, &rightleftharpoons;, &rlhar; · Arrows (Unicode block)). "eqm" is from "is in equilibrium with". -DePiep (talk) 13:30, 19 March 2015 (UTC)
and equlibrium is symbolized by two harpoons - so any reason not to use the unicode? Christian75 (talk) 17:59, 19 March 2015 (UTC)
I am supporting your point, Christian75. I was just adding a U+ reference. -DePiep (talk) 18:18, 19 March 2015 (UTC)
, . What about these then? Plasmic Physics (talk) 09:48, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
Nice! I think we avoid the use of math because you can't copy and paste it (in MS Word is renders as images) so to answer Christian, I think any Unicode character is acceptable. --Project Osprey (talk) 09:56, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
re Plasmic Physics: , are not available in Unicode. The mirrored one (wrt arrow direction) is: U+21CB LEFTWARDS HARPOON OVER RIGHTWARDS HARPOON (&leftrightharpoons;, &lrhar;, &ReverseEquilibrium;).
Clearly, Unicode decided not to use its chemical meaning in the names ("equilibrum"), but a descriptive name instead. -DePiep (talk) 10:16, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
We are left with the option to replace, in {{eqm}}, current image with the Unicode character. The only objection I can think of is: when used in combination with , (images) in that same article, there might be a style break within a page? I don't know. -DePiep (talk) 20:10, 20 March 2015 (UTC)

AfC candidates

Would anybody care to improve and publish:

? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 17:41, 20 March 2015 (UTC)

I'm not that familiar with the draft-to-article process, but these need some 'peer' checks & edits I understand, then? (Sometimes I just start a bold stub and that stays silently ...) -DePiep (talk) 20:15, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
The second is not released for assessment. But are bot topics suitable for Wikipedia? Graeme Bartlett (talk) 03:14, 21 March 2015 (UTC)
The first strikes me as overly specialized and perhaps should be renamed as Carbonyl allylation. The second should be merged into Phenylglyoxal. Boghog (talk) 10:24, 21 March 2015 (UTC)
When I search for the second one, there are very few hits. But the first one has some scholarly work on it. So the addition article could stand alone, but not the second. Graeme Bartlett (talk) 12:16, 21 March 2015 (UTC)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but is the example in first page not simply a tin catalysed Ene reaction? --Project Osprey (talk) 14:11, 21 March 2015 (UTC)

Indium tin oxide

Please could someone replace the bespoke infobox on Indium tin oxide with {{Chembox}}? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 14:07, 12 March 2015 (UTC)

ITO is a solid solution of roughly 90% In2O3 and 10% SnO2 -composition is variable- and therefore physical poperties too. Mixtures like this and other "doped" inorganics don't fit with the chem box which is designed for chemical compounds. What do others think? Axiosaurus (talk) 14:42, 12 March 2015 (UTC)

Exactly. This sort of things has come up before. Thus far, the only exceptions which I'm aware of are the mineral acids, and kinetically unstable chemicals such as nitrogen dioxide which is in equilibrium with dinitrogen tetraoxide. Plasmic Physics (talk) 11:27, 14 March 2015 (UTC)
Would there be any profit in a dedicated infobox, or adding parameters to {chembox} for these? At least we'd have a what-links-here list. -DePiep (talk) 22:14, 18 March 2015 (UTC)
I'm not sure that I understand what you're asking. If it is whether I agree with the use of chemboxes for the mineral acids, then no, I see no way in which theses chemboxes enrich the articles or benefit the reader. To be sure, I'm not talking about the anhydrous, pure acids, but their solutions, c.f. Hydrogen chloride and Hydrochloric acid. Plasmic Physics (talk) 10:28, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
So, {Chembox} can not be used for these. OK.
My other question is, whether it would be useful to create a tempalte, say {Infobox chemical mixture}, that could cover these articles (substances). As it is now, Indium tin oxide has an in-the-article crafted infobox, like:
{{Infobox
| label1 = ...
| data1 = ...
}}
So there are no dedicated or specific parameters available. If the answer is no, I'm :-) with that too. Must say, I have no clue for the answer because I'm not into chemistry, I'm more into templates. -DePiep (talk) 11:09, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
What would need to be created is an infobox that somehow demonstrates how the chemical properties of the mixture varies with composition, not just that it varies, which is necessarily true. I suspect that such an infobox which coveres a similar number of properties as the chemboxes would simply be too unwieldy to be practical, which is why I suggest that it should suffice to discuss in detail the variation of properties in the main article space, with only a few tables. Plasmic Physics (talk) 11:21, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
That would mostly merit parameters like |compound1 =, |formula1= (+ indexes 2, 3, ..). Then maybe a list of mixtures: |mix12=40%, 60% with meaningful properties |mix12_mp=, |mix12_application=. Just popping ideas. -DePiep (talk) 11:43, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
I add, a table and especially a graph would be more telling (horizontal axis having the mixture %). -DePiep (talk) 11:45, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
For alloys like solder. -DePiep (talk) 11:47, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
I didn't even consider mixtures with more than three components such as thermite (It often does). Plasmic Physics (talk) 20:02, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
Actually, I am asking like: is this worth a sandbox demo? Would you make development suggestions? I surely won't push it up your watchlist ;-) ! -DePiep (talk) 20:19, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
I suppose I could. Plasmic Physics (talk) 23:30, 21 March 2015 (UTC)

chemeo.com

A number of IPs have been adding links to chemeo.com to chemistry articles:

...and maybe others. Is there consensus that this is a useful link? The fact that the editor adds two links and then switches IPs suggests they believe they are doing something wrong and want to avoid detection. ChemNerd (talk) 11:48, 24 March 2015 (UTC)

I see that Materialscientist has now reverted all these additions, so perhaps the question is moot now unless the user returns. ChemNerd (talk) 13:41, 24 March 2015 (UTC)
The linked pages seem to be come kind of information aggregation, surprisingly free from advertisements like other similar pages around. But not adding any more than we would expect from our infobox content. Perhaps the person doing this is Loïc d'Anterroches the software writing consultant behind Céondo. If he does not have enough to do perhaps we ask him to do something useful on Wikipedia in this project. Graeme Bartlett (talk) 20:57, 24 March 2015 (UTC)
Yes, and Edgar181 too. I see no reason why linking to chemeo.com instead of the few databases they copy (like NIST Webbook). Besides, we can not guarantee that chemeo.com will remain accurate, stable and spam free - they come from ceondo.com, which states on their front page: "Céondo, custom scientific software development and services for the oil & gas, chemical, pharmaceutical and crop science industries. Since 2007, we are really good at converting your models into easy to use software." Materialscientist (talk) 02:50, 25 March 2015 (UTC)
@ChemNerd: The fact that the editor switches IPs suggests to me nothing more than that they are on a connection with a Dynamic IP address. Please assume good fiath. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 14:07, 25 March 2015 (UTC)

Hello, I was the author of the links and I am author of Cheméo. I added something like 10 links in total, nothing more, always trying to add a link when it brings something. With respect to the difference with the infobox content, as a chemical engineer, you really need all the values with uncertainties when doing regressions, this is why it brings something to the users (also the data are available as Excel file, which is quite nice). My question, and this is a genuine question, can Wikipedia become a place where the kind of data we need as chemical engineer is available (and I would be glad to setup export options from Cheméo to a Wikipedia compatible format) or should we say, no, this is not the place and we even consider a link from Wikipedia to a website like Cheméo equivalent to spamming? If you consider it as spam, I can take the referrer logs of Cheméo to find all the links and remove them. I have no problems with it, I enjoy the quality of Wikipedia every single day, so I will never do something considered unwelcome by the community, but again, I would be glad to contribute! (Note, I created the ChemMeyer account right now, the change of IP addresses in the edit were just because I have a simple DSL connection, I did not try to avoid dectection) ChemMeyer (talk) 08:11, 25 March 2015 (UTC)

Hi, welcome to Wikipedia (as I just welcomed you on your talkpage as well). I should first point you to m:Terms of use and the local conflict of interest guideline. It is not always necessary about what is linked to, it may be more about how the links are added (technically you were in violation of Wikimedia's Terms of use) - that is the behaviour that is frowned upon within Wikipedia (and often leads to reversion of edits until discussed). That being said, I am glad that you are here and discussing - lets find out whether there is merit to Wikipedia to have these links. If we agree that these links sufficiently add something to Wikipedia's content and are a good database to link to, then these links could be added (or even through an identifier linked from the ChemBox template). Also, if certain data is really of encyclopedic interest, maybe the data itself could/should be added, and not just a link to the data. --Dirk Beetstra T C 09:02, 25 March 2015 (UTC)
Perhaps ChemMeyer you can look at the chembox parameters that we have on each article and fill in the missing data, with referencing to reliable sources for that data. If there are fields in the chembox missing for certain classes of data then let us discuss it here or at Wikipedia talk:Chemical infobox. You could propose some extra quality standards in addition to the little green ticks. Graeme Bartlett (talk) 11:20, 25 March 2015 (UTC)
First, thank you for the very positive tone, even after my by break of the Terms of use. My "problem" so to speak with the chembox is that it is missing the uncertainty on the values. For example, just take the www.chemeo.com/cid/45-400-7/Octane if you look at the critical pressure, you cannot really "put" a value on it, as we have a lot of different measurements, each with a given uncertainty, here from 24.7 to 24.9712 kPa for the measurements. So, you can put a range (this is the case for the standard enthalphy of combustion on Octane) but you lose a lot of information. Is the range the upper/lower bounds of an average with +/- 1 or 2 std deviation? Is the range the "raw" range of the measurements? Is the upper value the upper measurement + the uncertainty or just the upper measurement? So, maybe I should write a document on "how to select/calculate" the "best value" for a compound property based on measurements and discuss it with you at Wikipedia talk:Chemical infobox. But as every single scientist has a different idea on the subject, chemeo is there to just provide the raw data in an easy to ingest way. The "traditional" use of the data is to use all the data in the regressions with a weighted regression using the uncertainty of each data point to weight the value. I hope this comment helps you understanding my background and why the work on Cheméo (I suffered not having this kind of data during my PhD) ChemMeyer (talk) 12:04, 25 March 2015 (UTC)
I like the option to list all C
6
H
6
O
2
: [1]. A category in wiki? ChemMeyer, since your data sheets are more elaborate and complete in their topic, what do you mean by "I enjoy the quality of Wikipedia every single day"? -DePiep (talk) 12:16, 25 March 2015 (UTC)
I enjoy the quality of Wikipedia on many subjects (I often put "wikipedia" in my Google search when looking for something), this is why I do not want to do something which could affect badly the community behind it and if I can contribute positively, I will do it. ChemMeyer (talk) 12:58, 25 March 2015 (UTC)
To be clear, I intended to ask an open question, not checking your faith ;-). IMO the quality of the chemeo data sheet is higher than {{Chembox}} (especially in certain aspects), so I was looking what you learned from wiki. Consider answered. -DePiep (talk) 13:14, 25 March 2015 (UTC)
The chembox is also providing a lot of contextual information not available on cheméo. If you want the odor of substance, etc. Wikipedia has it. So, for some domains, the chembox is definitely better. I am a process/chemical engineer too, so it means that all the medical properties are a bit excluded from the data I collect as I cannot assess their quality. ChemMeyer (talk) 13:26, 25 March 2015 (UTC)
Try enter C6H6O2 into the search box (or press here: C6H6O2) Christian75 (talk) 12:41, 25 March 2015 (UTC)
Nice Category:Molecular formula set index pages. Sets are up to date? Link from chembox? -DePiep (talk) 12:52, 25 March 2015 (UTC)

Categories for molecules

The above discussion raises an interesting point. If we use categories like Category:C10 molecules, Category:H14 molecules, etc., then it should be possible to query category intersections to find all C10H14... molecule articles. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 14:07, 25 March 2015 (UTC)

"Query category intersections" is a years-old feature request. There are third-party or wmlabs tools that do it (WP:CATSCAN for example). DMacks (talk) 15:02, 25 March 2015 (UTC)
While category crossing is core of the wikipedia cat principle, such querying is slow, cumbersome programming and not available for readers (compare: search box). Is why we are still using categfories like "American scientist" (which, in this, should be split).
wrt this specific idea, to name category like :Category:H14 molecules, the naming in itself is not meaningful. So it would be a more theoretical tree (while logically sound). Using existing set lists such as article page C6H6O2 is one other route (takes more manual maintenance); and before knowing about these setlists I had thought of :Category:C6H6O2. -DePiep (talk) 15:39, 25 March 2015 (UTC)

Chemical classes and functional groups

Do we have to split articles to avoid confusion between chemical class and functional group ? For example peroxy acid is about the group -OOH or about the family of all peroxy acids ? Sometimes we are doing the difference like in Alcohol and Hydroxyl, sometimes not. Please look at the page Functional_group (see tables) to see that there is a difference but this difference is not applied in the article structure. Can we define a general trend in order to clear this confusion ?Snipre (talk) 09:42, 23 March 2015 (UTC)

This is a similar issue to sulfate the ion or the compound sulfates. Here there is one article with poor coverage of sulfates. There is a great deal of overlap between functional group and class of coupounds with that functional group. Though if there were two separate articles, the emphasis could differ one on the properties, and one on the diversity of compounds.
If the article is small eg peroxy acid then there is no reason to split. But peroxy acids could talk about the compound class and peroxy acid the group. I have only been making combined articles so far: eg Pentanitratoaluminate, Monofluorophosphate, Tetrafluoroberyllate and Borinic acid. Graeme Bartlett (talk) 00:24, 24 March 2015 (UTC)
@Graeme Bartlett: Thanks for the comment. Just one question more: how do you think can we name each kind of article. Something like "peroxy acid" for article about the class and "peroxy acid group" for the functional group ?
I was suggesting adding an "s" for the class and no s for the group or ion. It could be confusing though, but so could my suggestion. The word group could mean the functional group, or it could means class of substances. We certainly need to have the main article at the basic name, such as peroxy acid. But what should be the main topic be? Other ideas are peroxy acid functional group or peroxy acid moiety. For some we may need to include the terms "ion" or "radical". For the groups there could be variations though. Could you imagine ether being called ether group? For classes of compounds they may also be called a derivative. Examples where they already differ are seen in the functional group article such as Amide versus Carboxamide, or Thione versus Carbonothioyl — but there seem to be very few. Graeme Bartlett (talk) 21:35, 26 March 2015 (UTC)

New article at AfC

Greetings. We have an article over at AfC, which appears to be copacetic, but I am definitely not a chemistry person. Could someone from this project take a look at either ping me, or respond here? Here's the link to the article. Much appreciated. Onel5969 (talk) 21:11, 29 March 2015 (UTC)

@Onel5969: This looks like homework. There's been a rash of that lately in bio/chem articles and the username is consistent with the other ones I've seen. The structure and reactions sections look okay on a quick skim; the applications section presents a lot of proposed/prototyped applications, but the TOC heading and text tend to give the impression that they're in active use. These are statements about research, not in the core of the WP:MEDRS scope, but some of the medical-flavored claims still need a lot of toning down, especially the adenosine section. Opabinia regalis (talk) 03:54, 30 March 2015 (UTC)
It's a legitimate compound already mentioned at Boranes and Caesium dodecaborate. That said the article could do with a lot of thinning-out; the compound is more-or-less just of theoretical interest and doesn't have any real world applications yet. --Project Osprey (talk) 09:04, 30 March 2015 (UTC)
Thanks Opabinia regalis and Project Osprey - Based on your comments, I'm going to decline the article, stating that it's not written in an encyclopedic tone. Then, unless you object, I am going to share some of the things you've said (without naming you), to give the editor some direction. Onel5969 (talk) 12:42, 30 March 2015 (UTC)
Well I think that you are too late, despite the pre-existing solid articles cited by Osprey. This kind mediocrity makes Wikipedia look silly and means more work for others. --Smokefoot (talk) 13:24, 30 March 2015 (UTC)
Seems you are right, Smokefoot - Different editors have different ways of seeing things. I had hoped to be a little more pro-active about this article (like I try to be regarding math articles), and ask for help from the project, but Graeme Bartlett, who is a very good editor, saw it otherwise. Anyway, thank you all for taking the time to respond. Onel5969 (talk) 14:12, 30 March 2015 (UTC)
Sorry about causing chaos here. I moved it to dodecaborate. It was just about the oldest unreviewed AFC page. My findings are that the article is a bit of a blend of information different substances, including a borane that does not seem to have been made, two kinds of ion, one exotic, and one quite real, and a carborane. The carborane writings might be able to go in a different article. We did have a need for an article on dodecaborate rather than just a redirect. We can continue with the idea to merge with Caesium dodecaborate. Graeme Bartlett (talk) 21:03, 30 March 2015 (UTC)

Paper: Wikipedia Chemical Structure Explorer

I've just been made aware of:

Wikipedia Chemical Structure Explorer: substructure and similarity searching of molecules from Wikipedia
Peter Ertl, Luc Patiny, Thomas Sander, Christian Rufener and Michaël Zasso
Journal of Cheminformatics 2015, 7:10
doi:10.1186/s13321-015-0061-y

-- Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 15:54, 25 March 2015 (UTC)

[2]. Wow. -DePiep (talk) 16:02, 25 March 2015 (UTC)
The website is here. User:Mzasso was apparently involved in the development of this tool. -- Ed (Edgar181) 16:26, 25 March 2015 (UTC)
I am 'visiting' WP:CHEM ~one year by now, mostly editing templates. I am not a chemicalitycist. I am surprised that: 1. chemistry is so well organised and well working on the web, 2. that there is little development in our {{Chembox}} & {{Drugbox}} data setups. For example, only recently we can split CAS RN's over multiples in one {{Chembox}}. I am working these templates, but rarely I see suggestions for improvements (by flaming requests!). Shouldn't/couldn't enwiki be the #1 spot for 15000 chemicals? Didn't this cheminfo.org have one suggestion for improvement? -DePiep (talk) 22:14, 25 March 2015 (UTC)
I suppose this should motivate us to try to fix errors, merge synomym or alternate spelling pages. Also if people are building tools to use the infoboxes, it means we will cause chaos if we change the structure! Graeme Bartlett (talk) 03:13, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
This is great! Nice work, Mzasso et al!
I imagine the pyrrole errors must have originated in some upstream tool used to generate the SMILES strings. Those should be easy to fix.
DePiep, I'm not sure what suggestions you're looking for, but one thing this data suggests is that SMILES strings in wikitext are fragile. The largest source of errors is likely to be just drawing mistakes, but since SMILES strings are text, they're editable just like everything else on the page and therefore subject to copy/paste errors, typos, undetected vandalism, etc. I am new to the whole wikidata thing but that seems like the obvious place to store this kind of data, no?
Any why stop at 15,000? Import everything with a literature annotation from ZINC? ;) Opabinia regalis (talk) 04:16, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
Opabinia regalis, I'm looking for major directions & inspirations for {Chembox}: merge with {Drugbox}?, rebuild in Lua asap?, verify the fields?, re-organise extra links?, connect with wikidata?, etcetera. Last years, development has stalled imo. -DePiep (talk) 11:57, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
SMILES seems to fail pretty badly for non-classical bonding such as transition-metal complexes. Ferrocene is one of the simplest of these pathological cases. A long-term gripe of mine is using them to generate the JSMol 3D images that are really high quality images of sometimes complete chemical nonsense. DMacks (talk) 04:35, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
Fails it on Wikipedia or in general? (I have no experience with SMILES). Christian75 (talk) 09:37, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
The problem with Wikidata is that "nobody" sees your edit (I think they are planing to add edits to your watchlist, but not articles), and its very diffucult to figure out where to edit the field in the infobox (no view/edit button). Christian75 (talk) 09:37, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
AIUI, a fix for the latter issue is in hand. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 10:23, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
@Christian75: WRONG. You can see the edits of WD in your watchlist in en:WP. You have to activate the function in your preference under Watchlist (Advanced options "Show Wikidata edits in your watchlist"). You can with one clic access to the details of the edit. The only thing missing is the possibility to add comment to wikidata edit. And there is lua code to access to the WD item from infobox: this has just to be added in the code of the chembox. Again this is just a problem of using and appling the existing tools. Some improvements have to be done but the basics are there. Snipre (talk) 10:40, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
The majority of the data that wikidata collects seems to be ID numbers for other databases (i.e. CAS, Chemspider, Pubchem, ENICS etc), the entries for chemicals contain very little of what we as chemists would consider to be the key data (bpt, mpt, solubility etc). --Project Osprey (talk) 10:59, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
The problem is that WD is under development and we miss the quantity datatype with unit: you can add numbers but you can't add unit. So all data about physical or biological properties are not yet implemented but they are already planned (see d:Wikidata:WikiProject_Chemistry/Properties). The quantity datatype with unit should be available this year around June-July according to development progress for WD. Snipre (talk) 11:09, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
I do not use my watchlist to review edits for chemistry/chemical articles but the history of the article and Special:Contributions. I do not think you have to activate it [wikidata in your watchlist] (mine was activated). I tried to change a wikidata image, and added a article which used it (via WikiData) on my watchlist, but it didnt seem to work (but it look like they are working at it phab:T90435). Nice if the infoboxes gets a button to edit the "properties" on wikidata (Do you have a link to the module? I havent seen it used anywere). Christian75 (talk) 11:16, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
I had to check the option to have my watchlist able to follow WD edits. Better to do it. For the direct link in the infobox to the WD item, I can just give you an example: go to the hungary WP, for example hu:Lyon and look at the population data (Teljes népesség in the infobox). You can see a ± symbol after the reference anchor, this is the link to the population property in the WD item for Lyon. Snipre (talk) 12:50, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
Thanks, its done with hu:Modul:Wikidata (search for "+/-") Christian75 (talk) 13:12, 26 March 2015 (UTC) btw: its only for population it has a +/-. a lot of data in that infobox are from wikidata (the all the images, Ország, INSEE-kód, Irányítószám, Testvérvárosok, time zone (Időzóna), the map and the coordinates. (but it could be fixed by templates) Christian75 (talk) 13:21, 26 March 2015 (UTC)

I'm just a lay editor, I don't know how to change templates or add things to wikidata, even chembox validation confuses me (am I supposed to be turning those crosses to ticks somehow?) but even I can see advantages to this. The fact that it shows structures related to what you're searching for should allow us to tighten-up our categories and find orphan compounds, plus mass error checking for SMILES and other parameters. It's got me thinking though; we've got 15,000 compounds and we're trying to organize them via the use of categories or 'see also' sections, chembox data is still largely checked manually, it just seems woefully insufficient. Perhaps we could try and recruit Mzasso? DePiep is probably right, Mzasso is likely to have ideas on how we could better curate our database and I would be interested to hear what they are. --Project Osprey (talk) 10:34, 26 March 2015 (UTC)

I am contributor on WD so I can't be fair but the first step to create a secured database is to have ... a database. Right now data in articles are not correctly monitored because the access to this data is difficult: you have to extract the data from the wikitext and this a mess because data are mixed with formatting code. So by creating a real database you can run automatic tools to check modifications and to compare periodically the content with other databases in order to ensure a correct data set. Snipre (talk) 11:02, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
Sorry, that wasn't fair of me, I know people are trying to fix this. Is the data in the chembox more machine readable as the values are better defined? --Project Osprey (talk) 11:08, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
This is a problem of parsing: in chembox you mix number and string for one data. The value and the unit. Each time you have to extract this kind of information from the wikitext and that is dependent on the way people write the data in the infobox. If you have a structured database, you avoid this extraction step and you eliminate the problem of bad formatted data. If you can format all values in chembox according to the same pattern, yes you will have a better machine readable infobox, but this is not possible because not all contributors are familiar with editing rules. Snipre (talk) 12:58, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
Snipre, this I do not get. For two years already. What on earth can enwiki editors (including template& Lua editors like me) do to improve this WD-support for chemicals? One never reads such a task/request. (is there a bot that already scraped CAS RN and PubChem id's from our 15k templated chem articles?) -DePiep (talk) 21:10, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
DePiep If you want to know how you can help look at d:Wikidata:WikiProject_Chemistry/ChemID. Right now we use Q number (WD identifiers) to connect articles between different WP but who checks that the links were build with the good articles ? Snipre (talk) 06:41, 27 March 2015 (UTC)
re Snipre Shouldn't that 'who checks'-question be answered five years ago when wikidata was designed?
You write about "The value and the unit". I note that, by SI definition, the wording is: "value = number × unit", eg "length = 5 m". It is algebraic (it's SI-legal to write: "value / unit = number"). I hope WD wants to use this right from the start. (To solve: "value" in database is not "value" in SI; it's more like data vs datatype I guess). mistake -DePiep (talk) 07:38, 30 March 2015 (UTC)
DePiep That is the choice of each WP to use WD or not for linking articles and as each WP is free to decide how to split articles according to subjects, this is their task to select the corresponding articles in others languages. WD is a tool and can't decide if an article about a stereoisomer can be linked to another article about the racemic. Each WP can have its own rules, the question is just to know if they are inside each WP rules or recommendations to treat that question.
For the question of value I think you find yourself the answer. But please consider that a value can be something different than a number and a unit. WD manages strings, numbers, URL,... So SI definitions can't be applied straightforward. Snipre (talk) 08:27, 30 March 2015 (UTC)
I'm saying that the Database Universum should change the word "value" (meaning something like: a single field input). I do state that you should not change the SI-wording that is "value = number × unit" when discussing that datatype (then again, writing: "the datatype for measurement is structured value × unit" does not solve it does it). It's up to WD people to find a solution. mistake. -DePiep (talk) 08:37, 30 March 2015 (UTC)
My mistake. SI base unit uses this wording: quantity = number × unit (as in: length = 5 m). No ambiguous meaning in here. The wikidata datatype could be quantity then? Note 1: outside of SI anything can happen, eg pounds and long tons. Note 2: in SI parlance, the word "value" is used this way: "The value of a quantity is generally expressed as the product of a number and a unit".Brochure, Chapter 1. That nicely would be the content of that data field, right? I apologise for this misleading mistake. @Snipre:. -DePiep (talk) 08:35, 2 April 2015 (UTC)
  • A short discussion with Andy Mabbett invited me to add the wikidata reference to the compounds on chemeo.com. Once the link wikidata <-> chemeo id is there, I can easily provide a way to generate a read to "paste" data page with the data I have collected. I could also create a small crawler doing a check between the information I have and the info in the chembox to help spot the errors. ChemMeyer (talk) 20:12, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
@ChemMeyer: Or you can export your data in WD. Please have a look at d:Help:Sources to have an idea about the structure of source data. This will ensure a future automatic way to generate references in the WP articles. Currently data with units can't be added. The quantity datatype with unit will be implemented in the next months but not definitive date is given (see this). Snipre (talk) 21:36, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
Ideally Wikipedia should have a chemical registration system based on a unique identifier that would prevent unintentional content forks. Canonical SMILES works pretty well for organics but apparently not so well for transition-metal complexes. InChI may be an alternative. All other chemical identifiers (e.g., CAS Registry Number, PubChem ID, chemeo id. etc.) should be linked to the structure as defined by the Canonical SMILES or InChI. Sanity checks between the SMILES/InChI and external IDs could be run by bots. (User:BogBot did a limited amount of this type of checking on {{Infobox drug}} here). Boghog (talk) 21:54, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
@DMacks: Is the SMILES problem with transition-metal complexes inherent to SMILES or the software that was used to generate the SMILES? Obviously the later can be fixed whereas the former cannot. Boghog (talk) 22:14, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
I tried feeding ferrocene to molconvert and didn't get anything usable, so it's not just JSMol. I imagine the problem is these tools are failing at figuring out the coordination geometry, which the SMILES string alone doesn't say much about. I agree there should be one canonical unique identifier used to key the rest of the data, but is the best way to sanity-check data here, or to (eventually) move it to wikidata and use that to populate the local infoboxes? Seems like the data is that way less susceptible to text degradation, and would need less frequent bot-validation. Either way, DePiep - seems like verification is first priority, wikidata migration when possible (I mentioned I was new to the whole idea, I would never have thought units would be a limitation!). Opabinia regalis (talk) 05:06, 27 March 2015 (UTC)
The SMILES is limited, it was developed for organic chemistry considering only the connectivity between atoms and with the time "patched" to express better the complexity of the molecules. It is very good to find all the nearly identical molecules and in nearly all the cases you have a unique "canonical" SMILES for the molecule. But you have too many conflicts to use it as unique identifier. The InChI key in format: TVMXDCGIABBOFY-UHFFFAOYSA-N is a special hash and can conflict too. The full InChI is what is at the moment considered the best unique identifier derived from the molecular structure. Usually as a database curator, you try to use all the identifiers you have about a molecule and use heuristics to merge the records in your database. This is of course error prone. (Side note, yes I will try to push data into Wikidata once the units etc. are there) ChemMeyer (talk) 08:43, 27 March 2015 (UTC)

As coauthors of this paper Michael Zasso and me (Lpatiny) have thanks to this tool corrected many mistakes in SMILES that were present in wikipedia. Our idea behind this tool is to increase the search possibilities of wikipedia and we have therefore make everything open source under a BSD license and a system allowing a nightly automatic updates (with update of the github repository). Up to know wikipedia queries capabilities are relatively limited and here we can provide a new way to search for chemicals. One of the original idea is that the substructure search engine is in the client browser and not on the server ! This means that you don't actually need any intelligence on the server and it allows to make interactive substructure search that was not available on the internet up to know (even offline !). We invested a lot of effort to create this tool and we are wondering if you could consider changing the chembox / drugbox to add a search capability directly in the box (small magnifier) that would point to our website or any other website that could fork our project. Lpatiny (talk) 21:54, 27 March 2015 (UTC)

@Lpatiny: A small question: why do you use WP and not PubChem which offers you the possibility to perform research on a more larger dataset ? Then why do you restrict to only one WP like en:WP and not working with de:WP or with a merged set of these two WPs ? Snipre (talk) 14:25, 28 March 2015 (UTC)
1) I think a link to this tool allowing search by structure would be really useful for readers (who are, by hypothesis, already on WP and not on PubChem).
2) Have you considered doing something like clustering the WP entries, comparing to pubchem, and reporting back which areas of chemical space are underrepresented on WP? Opabinia regalis (talk) 20:35, 28 March 2015 (UTC)
Opabinia regalis I am working on something similar using data from en, de and fr:WP. I create an unique list using WD ID in order to compare data from the 3 WPs. Results are there and first analysis there. Snipre (talk) 21:16, 28 March 2015 (UTC)
Thanks, will take a look! Opabinia regalis (talk) 03:35, 30 March 2015 (UTC)
@Snipre: We are thinking that wikipedia could somehow replace the merck index. Just some important molecules that are well described. This is the kind of "small" set of interesting molecules for which we can provide on the fly structure browsing. This would not be possible with PubChem (we would not be able to load all the structures in the browser !). Lpatiny (talk) 09:15, 30 March 2015 (UTC)
@Opabinia regalis: If would indeed be a good idea to give a list of products that are described in wikipedia but either don't have a chembox / drugbox. This could be done by searching the huge list of names present in PubChem to check if there is missing information. We never tried to do this. However for all the products that have a drugbox / chembox but no SMILES we have a report on the error page that is called "not found". Just go on http://www.cheminfo.org/wikipedia and click on "Browse errors" to get the list. Lpatiny (talk) 09:15, 30 March 2015 (UTC)

@Lpatiny: Have you considered including other language versions of Wikipedia, e.g. de.wikipedia or fr.wikipedia? The former does not have the SMILES code in the chembox, but assigning would be possible via Wikidata or the PubChem ID. --Leyo 19:01, 30 March 2015 (UTC)

@Leyo: We didn't think about it before but received a lot of requests for it (fr and de). We are considering hiring an internship here in Lausanne (Switzerland) to reconsider the system, use Wikidata and have it is all available languages as well as providing more searching possibilities. If anybody is interested in this project please contact me. We have some interesting demonstration of our system on http://www.cheminfo.org and there are a lot of functionalities we would like to add using the wikipedia data Lpatiny (talk) 07:27, 1 April 2015 (UTC)

Due to the arbitrary selection (and necessary incomplete listing) such navigation templates are completely useless IMO. Or is there a project guideline that supports them? --Leyo 08:53, 4 April 2015 (UTC)

I doubt their usefulness in articles. First of all, Category:Nitrogen compounds should cover this. OTOH, why not add this template to that category (and rm from articles)? It shows alternative identifiers (by formula), and has redlinks for those who are searching. Complementary to the category list, I'd say.-DePiep (talk) 09:10, 4 April 2015 (UTC)
Because of incompleteness it would be better to just link to families, eg there is already a template:nitrates, perhaps we could have templates for nitrides, and amines and amides. And then there are all the biomolecules with oxygen and nitrogen we can't expect to navigate. There is already a Template:Oxides, and some like Template:Oxides of carbon, but really you can't expect to link to all the oxygen compounds in a navigation box. The closest we could do would be just to link to the family members in a nav template. Graeme Bartlett (talk) 09:39, 4 April 2015 (UTC)
(edit conflict) It has been TfD in 2011 Wikipedia:Templates_for_discussion/Log/2011_August_16#Template:Rubidium_compounds (no consensus) - personally I found them usefull because its easy to navigate between related simple compounds of an element (which isnt possible with categories) - but some of these templates need some cleanup. An inclusion criteria could be that they are described in elementary chemistry books. Some of the templates are more organized, like Template:Molybdenum_compounds, and Template:Ruthenium_compounds. Christian75 (talk) 09:42, 4 April 2015 (UTC)
Your examples are actually useful because Wikipedia does not have so many articles on these element compounds, but the oxygena dn itrogen templates are still quite new, and have too many candidates to cover properly. So where there is a reasonable representation of what you might want to navigate to, then this is useful. But I don't think reproducing oxides in an oxygen compound template adds anything useful. Graeme Bartlett (talk) 10:45, 4 April 2015 (UTC)

Haber Process

An editor with strong views on political and technical history has overhauled large portions of Haber Process. IMHO, these edits are soap-boxy, so it would be good if others helped out. I tried to slow down the process but was quickly dismissed, indicating at an article ownership issue. Ideally, we would revert all and then the proposed changes would be discussed on the Talk page so that we can achieve consensus. The article is heavily consulted, being viewed 22,000 times last month alone.--Smokefoot (talk) 13:02, 7 April 2015 (UTC)

The additions are more than a little preachy (and wordy). There is some interesting history that could be added though, the Treaty of Versailles compelled BASF to license the Haber process to the French and the British managed to get them to sub-license it to ICI, so it was something of big deal politically. A lot of the other information could be cleaned up and moved over to Haber's page --Project Osprey (talk) 13:55, 7 April 2015 (UTC)

Do the text and structures in pyrazolone actually describe dihydropyrazolones (or pyrazolinones)? See CID 11513733 from PubChem for pyrazol-3-one. ChemNerd (talk) 18:53, 8 April 2015 (UTC)

Oh, you need to get a card-carrying organic chemist for that info, i.e. Edgar. --Smokefoot (talk) 22:39, 8 April 2015 (UTC)
I'm no Edgar, but I do have access to chemical databases. Scifinder resolves 3-pyrazolone and 1,2-dihydro-pyrazol-3-one to the same structure. It would seem that pyrazolone is used as a common name and 1,2-dihydropyrazolone is the IUPAC name; the Hantzsch–Widman nomenclature can become really confusing once you start substituting things so this might just be an historic cock-up. In any event searches using the IUPAC name get better results, which does make sense. Scifinder resolves pyrazolinone as the ring saturated compound (so the ketone of pyrazolidine, CASNo 27274-34-6), it's very rare in the literature and if you drop that CASNo into pubchem you get a different structure CID 351317 from PubChem so there may be some confusion regarding that. Best I can do I'm afraid --Project Osprey (talk) 09:54, 9 April 2015 (UTC)
I agree with Project Osprey. "Pyrazolone" is a chemical name that is used ambiguously. The structures described in pyrazolone are technically better named as dihydropyrazolones, but the term "pyrazolone" is commonly used for the related compounds with any degree of saturation. -- Ed (Edgar181) 12:09, 10 April 2015 (UTC)

LD50 vs LC50

Hi everyone, I had a question about LC50 values for several different gases. Is it okay to put an LC50 in the LD50 parameter, or is this something that should be put in the body of an article? As an example, I have a data sheet for chlorine trifluoride here that lists LC50 values in various organisms with exposure times, so I wanted to ask here about what to do since it's interesting/useful information. Thanks! Best, Emily Temple-Wood (NIOSH) (talk) 01:06, 21 February 2015 (UTC)

Are they measurements of subtly different things, or different terminology for essentially the same thing? (The discussion in the article LD50 isn't entirely clear to me.) If there's a subtle difference, perhaps there can be separate fields in the infobox for LD50 and LC50. Antony–22 (talkcontribs) 03:21, 21 February 2015 (UTC)
@Antony-22: LC50 is the lethal concentration (of a gas) while LD50 is the lethal dose, usually given IV or orally. Emily Temple-Wood (NIOSH) (talk) 06:03, 21 February 2015 (UTC)
They are clearly different things. LC50 is a concentration and LD50 is a quantity, usually expressed as a mass. The difference lies in the fact that LD50 refers to a quantity ingested whereas LC50 refers to a concentration external to the organism. That's why exposure times are important in relation to LC50. Petergans (talk) 11:42, 21 February 2015 (UTC)
Okay, that makes sense. So my next question is, it is possible for a single substance to have both an LD50 and an LC50, or is only one or the other meaningful for each substance? In any case, they both sound equally important, so my instinct is that either or both should be listed in Template:Chembox. Antony–22 (talkcontribs) 18:43, 21 February 2015 (UTC)
(added after the comments below) Consider, for instance, chlorine gas. LC50 (LC=Lethal Concentration) gives the concentration at which exposure to the gas will be, eventually, lethal in 50% of cases. LD50 (LD=Lethal Dose) gives the amount of gas that, when inhaled, will be lethal in 50% of cases. For gases there is no ambiguity. For liquids LD50 refers to ingestion, but LC50 is not so well defined; it could apply to topical exposure, or, in the case of a volatile liquid, exposure to the evaporate. For solids LC50 has no real meaning. Petergans (talk) 05:15, 22 February 2015 (UTC)
I would guess that in principle you could have both. But it's difficult to administer a weighed amount of a gas. So it makes most sense to use LC50 for gasses and LD50 for solids and liquids. Maproom (talk) 19:17, 21 February 2015 (UTC)
LC50 can be used for liquids or solids dissolved in a medium, particularly in in vitro testing such as the concentration of an antibiotic that will kill a bacteria. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 173.62.240.135 (talk) 19:57, 21 February 2015 (UTC)

So, returning to this - should we have a separate parameter in the chembox for LC50 or just add it to LD50 and note that it's an LC50? Thoughts? I don't particularly have a preference. Emily Temple-Wood (NIOSH) (talk) 22:30, 26 February 2015 (UTC)

There was the same issue in de.wikipedia, too. The consensus then was, to replace the LD50 parameter in the chembox by a more general one and to use de:Template:ToxDaten. Like this, the input is more flexible (see de:Benzaldehyd for an example [bottom of the box] with both LD50 and LC50 values). I don't say that a similar solution would suit best also on en.wikipedia. --Leyo 14:51, 27 February 2015 (UTC)
@Leyo: That looks useful, though I don't speak enough German to follow well. DePiep, as the Chembox guru, would this be an easy thing to fix/do if we get a consensus for it? Best, Emily Temple-Wood (NIOSH) (talk) 03:20, 5 March 2015 (UTC)
Of course we'll implement the outcome of a good talk. -DePiep (talk) 07:06, 5 March 2015 (UTC)
My notes. About the German wiki, Leyo points to. It knows these types of toxy measurements: LD50, LC50, LDLo, LCLo, LCt50, TDLo, TCLo, EC50, IC50, LD, LC. This name is mentioned, but in the rh side with the data. It also can add the organisme, intake etc (required parameter!). Then they produce a righthand text like (See de:LSD):
  • Toxikologische Daten: 11,7 mg·kg−1 (LD50, Ratte, oral, Hydrochlorid)[1].
We too could add this, under one label. I don't know if we must make all those fields required input. Also, it is a laboratoy-result, ie more meaningless for The Reader (?, I ask). However, this is a bigger excercise to develop (all this input is done through a single template). And this solution can be used in many more Chembox inputs (The dewiki has all input this way).
For now: Since LC50 is well defined, we could start with adding it old style, enwiki style: in a separate datarow. Our article on LD50/LC50 could be improved anyway. Also I'd like to hear from medicine editors on how & what to present. Later I'll have time to make proposals here. -DePiep (talk) 07:06, 5 March 2015 (UTC)
  • I add, replying to earlier posts here (the top half, eg Petergans): we can simply add a data row LC50, and leave it to the article editor to make a useful entry. Thew template does not chekc the sens of its data. As wiki works, the nonsense-input (like: an LC50 value for a solid) will probably be edited out in the end. -DePiep (talk) 07:14, 5 March 2015 (UTC)
  • I add #2: can someone explain why this LD50 is not in sister template {{Drugbox}}? (in the long term, these two can merge IMO). -DePiep (talk) 07:22, 5 March 2015 (UTC)
@DePiep: Yay, thank you so much! Emily Temple-Wood (NIOSH) (talk) 16:24, 14 April 2015 (UTC)

I would ask general attention

…from members of Wikiproject Chemistry at the Oxygen article, which was listed as FA, but has had some issues arise.

I am a newcomer there, arriving to edit because I wanted to reference the information on the structure of this homonuclear diatomic, and found the article in need of attention for its molecular orbital description, and successfully edited that.

I have, however, run afoul of two European, non-native English speaking editors for proposed changes that challenge their view of info box image content. There is no need to repeat those arguments here, for they are not the main issue any more.

The main issues are now three:

  • My edits are now being reverted just because they are mine. Because there are two editors involved, they view themselves as a consensus, and feel justified in their ability to do this.
  • Their reversions are comprehensive, throwing out baby with bath water. In the last reversion, I had (1) combined physical properties prose in two locations into one, separating it from molecular structure (MO) prose, and moving the phys prop text up in the article, (2) corrected gross errors in prose regarding an introduced image of a discharge tube, and (3) touched up the prose in the MO diagram section I had added earlier. All of these were reverted en masse with a personally directed edit summary.
  • Their reversions protect the very bad edits of one of the editors, which lack chemical expertise and do not pass as acceptable English.

On this last matter, I will give an example, and leave it for parties interested in high quality article evolution and protection to have a look.

Here is a recent edit made by one of the editors:

In an oxygen gas discharge spectrum tube, the molecular orbitals of oxygen are stimulated to emit light. The operating conditions for the oxygen image discharge tue: are a pressure of 5-10 mbar, a high voltage of 1.8 kV, a current of 18 mA and a frequency of 35 kHz. During the recombination of the ionized gas molecules, the characteristic color spectrum is emitted. In this case, a small part, caused reversibly formed by the supply of energy ozone. This kind of spectrum tubes are also important to study the spectral lines with a spectrometer.

Note that the text is rife with misspellings/English errors, and added very technical prose without any sources. I am a professional chemist, and could simply not begin to make sense of its meaning. Here is the correction I made that was reverted:

In an oxygen gas discharge spectrum tube,[clarification needed] the oxygen is stimulated to emit light.[citation needed] The operating conditions are a pressure of 5-10 mbar, a high voltage of 1.8 kV, a current of 18 mA and a frequency of 35 kHz.[original research?][citation needed] During the recombination of the ionized gas molecules,[clarification needed] a characteristic color spectrum is emitted.[citation needed] This kind of excitation is also important in general to the study of spectral lines with aid of a spectrometer.[clarification needed][citation needed]

In addition, this note was added, hidden in the article text, with the bracket-bang markup language:

  • Content referring to molecular orbitals emitting light removed as fundamental error. THIS SENTENCE REMOVED AS GIBBERISH: "In this case, a small part, caused reversibly formed by the supply of energy ozone."

My correcting and tagging edit was made, not in any sense as text to remain in the article "as is", but as a starting point to move the original poor edit in a direction to make it acceptable. (Only the grossest of error, that MOs emit light, and the completely incomprehensible prose were removed.) My edit was reverted, so the original, error-filled prose again appears. [The error-filled edit was by the first of the editors, and is what I referred to in (2) above. My edit was reverted carte blanche with the further edits (1) and (3), by the second editor, who returned the error-filled prose to the article.]

Note, the two editors in question insisted that the discharge tube image was needed in this FA article, and I insisted that if it appeared, prose needed to appear to explain the image, and how it fit into the article. I have no issue with the appearance of the image, just with the editorial control and poor quality that derives from the work of these two editors.

Finally, note, that the personal reversion by the second editor recombines the physical properties and molecular structure sections, which I believe are better discussed separately, and returns the problematic discharge tube prose to a section largely about physical (ground state) properties.

I leave this entirely in the hands of the Project. I haven't time or desire to fight with self-interested editors controlling an article as if it is their own. Le Prof Leprof 7272 (talk) 13:50, 10 March 2015 (UTC)

My comments on the situation above, not that I am a mind reader or analyst: An edit like "In an oxygen gas discharge spectrum tube,{{what?}} the oxygen is stimulated to emit light.{{cn}} The operating conditions are a pressure of 5-10 mbar, a high voltage of 1.8 kV, a current of 18 mA and a frequency of 35 kHz.{{OR}}{{cn}} During the recombination of the ionized gas molecules,{{what?}} a characteristic color spectrum is emitted.{{cn}} This kind of excitation is also important in general to the study of spectral lines with aid of a [[spectrometer]].{{what?}}{{cn}}}}" could be seen as antagonistic. Coming from an editor with what could be seen as a pretentious user name "LeProf" probably makes such corrections seem stinging. If you find the prose so lacking, then I would recommend fixing it vs complaining about it. If an article is being over-protected by editors, then incremental (constructive) edits are required. If even incremental edits (not tagging) doesnt work, leave the alternative phrasing on the Talk page for some future edit-arguing/consensus forming process and move on to a more malleable article. Wikipedia has a ton or bio-organic articles that would really benefit from someone with your background. Those are my 2 cents. --Smokefoot (talk) 17:46, 10 March 2015 (UTC)
The conflict between established contributors without the real world "qulification" and the real world academic with no reputaion at Wikipedia is always ending in suffering. The article Oxygen became a featured article and this needed a lot of work of alot of people. I was part of two very bad experiences and one ended with a chemist leave wikipedia, a chemist with a name reaction associated to his name. Is there a need to rush this? Is the problem in the article making it necessary to do tha mass tagging. Start a discussion on the talk page and stay on the path with the necessary patience. I am willing to help. Here are enough good chemists and wikipedia editors with reputation which will help with the problem. Wikipedia is a slow system with its own rules which are very much different what I learned in the university life. --Stone (talk) 23:26, 10 March 2015 (UTC)
All comments above apt, @Smokefoot:, @Stone: but no one with real world demands in the chemical field has time for the nonsense of having carefully constructed, meaningful prose reverted by individuals who neither have training nor writing credentials to be doing anything of the sort. When I happened upon the Oxygen article article, the MO explanation was simply wrong, and so I found a good UK text (Jack Barrett's) whose correlation diagram matched one at Wikimedia Commons, then integrated the MO correlation diagram and explanatory text into the article. At the same time I noticed a picture of a discharge tube that appeared out of place, and with no supporting text information. I moved that orphan image to Talk, explained what was needed for its return, and that is when the firestorm started. The baseless reverting and editing that followed reinserted twice-appearing superficial information about physical properties, and mucked up the MO section—see current Oxygen#Properties_and_molecular_structure and the edit history. (You can see the MO digram now follows immediately after the statement "At standard temperature and pressure, oxygen is a colorless, odorless gas…" though there is an explicit Physical properties section further below.) At the same time, the discharge tube image—which appears because one of the editors runs a private, small museum that features these, and he believes his images belong in all articles possible— was returned to the article, with placement in the Oxygen#Physical_properties section [sic.]. Moreover, my editing of the description of the discharge tube was removed, carte blanche, and the illegible prior material was returned (see the Talk section, there). Bottom line, stilted, noun-verb disagreeing description of this misplaced image was returned in place of a good chemist's English, and remains to this day:

In an oxygen gas discharge spectrum tube, the molecular orbitals of oxygen are stimulated to emit light. The operating conditions for the oxygen image discharge tue: are a pressure of 5-10 mbar, a high voltage of 1.8 kV, a current of 18 mA and a frequency of 35 kHz. During the recombination of the ionized gas molecules, the characteristic color spectrum is emitted. In this case, a small part, caused reversibly formed by the supply of energy ozone. This kind of spectrum tubes are also important to study the spectral lines with a spectrometer. [Bold emphasis of mistakes added.]

Granted, to take the convoluted prose from what they originally entered to anything remotely readable required tags to call attention to the need for clarification (leading to an appearance viewed by @Smokefoot: as antagonistic). But can anyone here otherwise make full sense of this completely unsourced paragraph? If not deleting part and parcel, what is the option besides leaving what one can, and tagging the rest? Someone, anyone, look to see what has become of this acknowledged good article. It is for this Project, and inorganic and chem education individuals here, to deal with. I'll return from time to time, and prod, but I will waste no more time doing solid, content-professional edits that get reverted by hobbyists that insert unsourced, near illegible material. If it isn't important enough for the inorg and chem ed folks here, it cannot be important enough for me. Cheers, and thank you to all for your real contributions. Tres bien, et bonne nuit. Le Prof Leprof 7272 (talk) 07:17, 25 April 2015 (UTC)

Drafts about chemistry

Hello, chemists. While browsing in Draft space I came across these, in case anyone is interested:

Anne Delong (talk) 14:55, 17 April 2015 (UTC)

Some thoughts:
Draft:Division of Organic Chemistry of the American Chemical Society - I don't think it is notable on its own, but content could be merged into American Chemical Society.
Draft:Total synthesis of Mesembrine has already been merged into Mesembrine.
Draft:1P-LSD is a copy of the article that was deleted at Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/1-propionyl-lysergic acid. It would qualify for WP:CSD#G4 if moved to article space in its current state.
Draft:1,2-addition of allylmetal compounds to carbonyl groups could be merged into Allyl#Allylation, or split out into a separate article at Allylation (currently a redirect).
-- Ed (Edgar181) 20:35, 17 April 2015 (UTC)
Ed: Thanks for taking the time to check these out.
  • (1) The American Chemical Society apparently has 32 of these divisions. What if I start a section called "Divisions", add a short summary of this division (a couple of sentences), and then move the draft to Division of Organic Chemistry of the American Chemical Society as a redirect pointing to this section? If I move the whole draft it will overbalance the article, and besides, some of it is similar to material in the main article
  • (2) I moved the redirected draft to Total synthesis of mesembrine and added the appropriate merge templates on the talk pages, so that should be all done.
  • (3) It appears that you are the one who has recreated this, so I'll leave it for you to work on, although from the comments in the deletion discussion there doesn't seem to be much hope.
  • (6) This would need to be done by someone who knows the subject. I can help with the technical parts if necessary.
  • (4) and (5) Maybe someone else would like to comment on these two. —Anne Delong (talk) 16:23, 21 April 2015 (UTC)
#4 looks OK to me, with some formatting fixes. You might get better insight on #5 at WT:MED since this is a clinical chemistry issue - my first thought is to merge to Isotonic hyponatremia#Pseudohyponatremia with a redirect at electrolyte exclusion effect.
Selective merge sounds right for #1. This is by a good margin the largest of the ACS divisions with some 15,000 members, so it's not too unbalanced to have a lot of information about it. Opabinia regalis (talk) 20:35, 21 April 2015 (UTC)
Opabinia regalis, a concern has been raised on the draft that the references are all from the same researchers. Some other sources have been found and added as general references. Can you move these into the article as citations to replace or suppliment the ones which may be too primary?—Anne Delong (talk) 01:39, 22 April 2015 (UTC)
you cannot replace the original citations with general references, the original authors have based their edits on these original citations. General references if relevant can always be added and supplement the article. The (peer-reviewed) primary sources are important for fact checking and validation via the article summary, secondary / general sources are usually difficult to access (paywall, not available in library). V8rik (talk) 16:36, 22 April 2015 (UTC)
Will look later tonight. Haven't had a chance to look at the papers in detail here, but agreed in the general case that Wikipedia's use of the term primary sources to refer to both peer-reviewed literature and fluff like press releases and blogs can be a problem. Opabinia regalis (talk) 19:32, 22 April 2015 (UTC)
@Anne Delong: Done, I'll leave the processing to you. I'm pretty sure I left templates scattered all over last time I tried to manually accept an AfC draft! Opabinia regalis (talk) 01:45, 23 April 2015 (UTC)
Yes, the AfC Helper Script really makes it simpler. It's in mainspace now at Diffusive gradients in thin films. I agree that general references which can't be read because of paywalls can't accurately be made into citations. I'm surprised, though, to see V8rik write that general references are not in libraries; in my experience it's the other way around, and the journal articles are the ones behind paywalls, while textbooks and science magazines are more accessible. That's likely because I'm not a scientist, so I don't have the usual subscriptions. I also agree that primary peer reviewed sources are better sources than blogs and personal websites for facts, although studies have been known to contain errors, so more than one such source is better. However, it's what the secondary sources say about a topic that demonstrates notability and acceptance by the scientific community, so it's good to have some of these too. Anyway, thanks to all who helped out here; I'll get to work on the society article in the morning.—Anne Delong (talk) 03:17, 23 April 2015 (UTC)
Note 1. Depends on your library and your library privileges? In my library I have access to all the electronic journals and a collection of general reference books but access to just any book is out of the question. Note 2. If the original author of the article is willing to replace references who am I to complain V8rik (talk) 21:52, 23 April 2015 (UTC)
I'm not the original author, who is seemingly long gone, but in this case it turns out that one of the sources recommended by the reviewer (the INAP white paper) is free, comprehensive, and relatively easy to read, so it's an effective addition to subscription-only journal sources. In general I'm not in favor of this pattern of presenting the most important distinction in sources as 'primary' vs 'secondary', rather than the quality of the evidence presented. Opabinia regalis (talk) 02:05, 24 April 2015 (UTC)
Moved allylmetal page to allyl V8rik (talk) 14:47, 26 April 2015 (UTC)
Thanks, V8rik. I moved the redirect to Carbonyl allylation, which I hope was an appropriate title, and added the usual attribution templates, so that's another one completed!—Anne Delong (talk) 01:46, 27 April 2015 (UTC)

Sandcherry moved parts of the Chemtura article to Flame retardant#California's fire safety laws. The text does not seem to always be neutral. I am thinking of phrases such as Blum appears to be unable to accommodate the views of other scientists and fire-safety experts. I would appreciate if a native English speaker could go through the text. --Leyo 00:28, 14 April 2015 (UTC)

That section is pretty awful. Just deleting the whole section would be my recommendation. The style furthers the tradition of Wikipedia being a forum for a lot "hippie science." --Smokefoot (talk) 13:25, 14 April 2015 (UTC)
I disagree on deleting the whole section. The topic is of high importance. --Leyo 14:33, 14 April 2015 (UTC)
The article is generally "awful" and needs a lot of work (trimming!) particularly the material moved from Chemtura. I will edit it as time permits. Cheers! Sandcherry (talk) 23:38, 24 April 2015 (UTC)
Sandcherry, trimming is a good description of what needs to be done. --Leyo 19:12, 25 April 2015 (UTC)
Better? Sandcherry (talk) 04:07, 4 May 2015 (UTC)