Henry Rzepa, Talks And Presentations

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Synopsis

Public lectures, talks, workshops and presentations by Henry S. Rzepa.

Episodes

  • Woodward and the Woodward-Hoffmann Rules

    20/05/2013 Duration: 46min

    A history of symmetry, stereochemistry and how the Woodward-Hoffman rules for pericyclic reactions came about.

  • Changing ways of sharing research in Chemistry

    11/09/2012 Duration: 17min

    Changing ways of sharing research in Chemistry In 1994 onwards, the Internet was seen as having an increasingly influential potential for how chemistry may be handled, shared, stored and communicated, and how the Internet might have impacted upon the quality, reproducibility and re-use of both experimental observation and computational modelling for new scientific opportunities. Examples will be presented to illustrate from a personal viewpoint how the author carried out collaborative research in pre-Internet days, and how things have changed up to 2012. This will include a review of early attempts at electronic conferencing, examples of modern "datuments" as data-enriched interactive articles, the role of digital repositories and how environments such as blogs and Wikis can be used to promote collaborative new science.

  • Computational Chiroptical Spectroscopy and reaction mechanisms in Sulfur-containing natural products.

    03/07/2012 Duration: 50min

    The first part of the talk will cover the essential features of modern chiroptical spectroscopies, and the second will illustrate these with several case studies. These will include the rather controversial histories of the determination of the absolute configurations of an important series of sulfur-containing natural products such as the dethiochaetocins and dehydrogliotoxins. The mechanism of dethionation of these species has been claimed to involve both retention and inversion of configuration at the carbon-S centre, and a possible route for either process is shown in the scheme below. Computational chemistry is also used to chart the viability of such a mechanism, although the techniques used to do so require methods that have only recently been introduced as routine procedures. The take-home message is intended to illustrate that the use of computational modeling for both chiroptical spectroscopy and associated mechanistic exploration is increasingly regarded as a sine qua non of the synthetic laborator

  • Computational Chiroptical Spectroscopies: an important symbiotic instrument for synthetic chemists.

    05/08/2011 Duration: 54min

    Of the 61M known compounds, it is estimated only around 1M have been reported as scalemic, a term used to describe any non-racemic chiral compound. Of these, an unknown proportion have a clearly established absolute configuration for the dominant enantiomer. Absolute configurations can be established by anomalous dispersion X-ray crystallography (and it is estimated about 11,000 such determinations have been made) or chiroptical spectroscopies. This talk concentrates on the latter, and in particular illustrates how electronic circular dichroism, optical rotatory power, optical rotatory dispersion and vibrational circular dichroism, coupled with powerful modern quantum mechanical simulations, can be used to assign the absolute configurations of scalemic molecules. In effect, the QM "chiroptical instrument" is seen as an indespensible symbiotic component of a modern synthetic laboratory, and the skills needed to operate it properly should be part of the training of any aspiring synthetic chemist who may be maki

  • Wikipedia and Molecular Sciences

    14/04/2011 Duration: 28min

    I venture to suggest that ... the general development of the human race to be well and effectually completed when all men, in all places, without any loss of time, at a low rate of charge, are cognizant through their senses, of all that they desire to be cognizant of in all other places. ... This is the grand annihilation of time and place which we are all striving for, and which in one small part we have been permitted to see actually realised" (Samuel Butler, 1863, [1])

  • Evolution of the science journal and the chemical publication

    05/04/2011 Duration: 40min

    The concept of a modern scientific journal becomes 346 years old in 2011 (DOI: 10.1098/rstl.1665.0001), although only since 1994 has the journal article been embedded in the Internet and Web era (DOI: 10.1039/C39940001907). Although the structure of the article itself morphed little during the first part of the Internet age, there are now signs that many aspects of its creation and dissemination are starting to evolve more rapidly. Here, several potential future enhancements are reviewed, including the role of the scientific blog in augmenting the effectiveness of the peer-review processes, the role of data-integrity within the article, integration of Web-enhanced and other data-rich and functional objects, the role of open digital repositories, article semantification, and delivery and re-functionalisation of the re-invented article via new generations of mobile personal devices.

  • iPads as a laboratory device: The future of the Web is the App?

    05/04/2011 Duration: 22min

    The iPad is the first of an apparently new generation of personal information appliance. The app has become the new shrink-wrapped access point for the web of chemistry, and the metaphors are driven by touch and the sensors built into the devices. Whilst it would be fair to say these have not really started being explored by chemists, we have had one year to explore the potential. Some low-hanging fruits can be picked, including redesigning the text book, the lecture and the laboratory for this medium. But will the concept merely fragment and dumb-down chemistry in yet another proprietory manner, or could this be the start of the next revolution?

  • The past, present and future of Scientific discourse

    18/01/2011 Duration: 39min

    A reflection on aspects of scientific publishing, journals and other forms of discourse, based on two scientific stories.

  • How digital repositories and HPC can help enhance the scientific publication

    12/01/2010 Duration: 26min

    There is now increasing focus on the imortance of structured data as an integral part of the primary scientific, technical and medical publication processes. Whereas traditional journals version 1 (circa 1680-2008) have rarely given structured and semantically enabled data much prominence (this not enhancing their business model), there is now far more pressure (from eg funding councils) to ensure that the often considerable investments in securing the data are not lost to the community, or to posterity. This presentation will give a brief demonstration of how the (computational) data generating resource (the HPC unit at Imperial College) has been structured and preserved via a uportal developed within the HPC unit, ingested into a digital repository, and now embedded in primary journal articles (version 2) and taught courses in the chemistry department.

  • To infinity ... and beyond: a scientific (and occasionally chemical) journey full of twists, writhes and three dimensions!

    06/05/2009 Duration: 01h01min

    Scientific ideas can take a long time to gestate, and their fusion sometimes emerges from the most unexpected of directions. The talk will illustrate a chemist’s attempt to merge ideas from different areas of mathematics, molecular biology, physics and indeed chemistry, and which together span some 314 years of scientific (and indeed musical) development. The central theme concerns twisted objects known as Mobius bands, their molecular analogues, and the consequences of exploring what happens when additional twists are added. The talk will also address the theme of how to express the emerging three dimensional concepts in a visually comprehensible and semantically harvestable manner suitable for both a (re-invention) of the scientific journal for an Internet era, and in presentations to an audience, with the help of some scissors, paper and hopefully the audience itself.

  • STM Innovations, Dec 5th, 2008

    10/12/2008 Duration: 24min

    Professor Henry Rzepa has had research interests in both computational chemistry and chemical information for thirty years, and was a pioneer of implementing chemistry on the Web at its start in 1993. He is the author of around 250 scientific articles in the former and 50 in the latter category. The talk today will be a fusion of these interests, and in particular how modern informatics practices can suubstantially enhance the scientific perception of published articles, taking the "paper" well beyond its old cellulose based limits.

  • Lisbon, 17 July, 2007

    22/08/2007 Duration: 53min

    Both chirality and aromaticity are cornerstone concepts for organic chemistry. Both had their origins in the 1840s or thereafter in the work of Pasteur, van't Hoff and LeBel for the former and Faraday, Loschmidt, Kekule, Armstrong for the latter, this reaching its first stage of theoretical maturity with Huckel's quantum mechanical analysis in the 20th Century (the famous 4n+2 rule). For a long period, these two concepts were thought to be exclusive; after all aromaticity manifested almost entirely in flat (achiral) benzenoid rings! Another concept, topology, also originated in the 1840s, having been coined by the mathematician Johann Listing, who also proposed fascinating topological objects such as trefoil knots, and rings now better known by their co-discoverer, Mobius. In the 1960s, the concepts of Mobius topologies and aromaticity started merging. The chemist Heilbronner proposed aromaticity rules for Mobius cycles, although he did not identify such cycles as being chiral (this property appears to have

  • ACS07:CINF-53, March 27th, 2007

    02/04/2007 Duration: 22min

    The Semantic wiki as a model for an intelligent chemistry journal, where a case is made for investigating Wikis as an authoring tool for the scientific publication process.

  • ACS07:CHED-71, March 25th, 2007

    29/03/2007 Duration: 23min

    A presentation given at the 233rd ACS Meeting in Chicago, as part of the session on using social networking tools to teach chemistry, and on the theme of Wikipedia - a holistic model for the communal creation of chemical course content

  • Cambridge University, Chemistry Department, 13 February, 2007.

    14/02/2007 Duration: 01h17s

    An exploration of unexpected links between different subjects in chemistry, and how new insights into chiral aromaticity came to be revealed.