Vol.
31 No. 1
January-February 2009
From the Editor
President's Column by Jung-Il Jin
Features
- Periodic Tables and IUPAC by G. Jeffery Leigh
-
The IUPAC International Chemical Identifier (InChI)
by Stephen R. Heller and Alan D. McNaught
- Celebrating Worldwide Excellence in Chemistry
by Gábor Magyarfalvi
- Nanotechnology in Good Health? by Hilda Coulsey and Alan Smith
Stamps International
- Inverted Methane by Daniel Rabinovich
IUPAC Wire
- Yuan Tseh Lee to Be President of the International
Council for Science
-
Leading Scientific Organization Affirms Freedom,
Responsibility, and the Universality of Science
- Remembering Dana Knox
- Chemical Heritage Foundation Fellowships
- The Royal Society of Chemistry and ChemSpider to
Develop InChI Resolver
- IUPAC Executive Director - expression of interest
Making an imPACt
- Glossary of Terms Related to Kinetics, Thermodynamics,
and Mechanisms of Polymerization
- Protocols on Safety, Efficacy, Standardization, and
Documentation of Herbal Medicine
- Solubility Data Series Volume 85: Transition and 12–14
Main Group Metals, Lanthanide, Actinide,
and Ammonium Halates
- Solubility Data Series Volume 86: Ethers and
Ketones with Water
Bookworm
- Future Energy—Improved, Sustainable, and Clean
Options for Our Planet
- Biophysical Chemistry of Fractal Structures
and Processes in Environmental Systems
- Macromolecular Symposia—recent volumes
Conference Call
- Chemical Education by Morton Z. Hoffman and Ponnadurai Ramasami
- Physical Organic Chemistry by Charles L. Perrin
- Molecular Order and Mobility in Polymer Systems by Tatiana Birshtein
Where 2B & Y
- Trace Elements in Food,
1–3 April 2009, Rome, Italy
- Chemical Thermodynamics,
29 June– 3 July 2009,
Kazan, Russia
- Aromatic Compounds
and π-Systems,
19–24 July 2009, Luxembourg, Grand-Duchy of Luxembourg
- NICE ’09,
29–30 July 2009, Tokyo, Japan
Mark Your Calendar
link to calendars of upcoming IUPAC-sponsored events
January-February
2009 pdf (1.3 MB)
Cover photo: The periodic table is a familiar icon present in science classrooms around the world. IUPAC’s only recommendation concerning the periodic table stipulates the Group numbering of 1 to 18.
Page
last modified 22 January 2009.
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