| Akcros Land and Sea
| Article: Akcros Land and Sea |
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How Akcros Chemicals co-ordinates its research activities using ChemOffice.
In the high-speed world of chemicals research, there are no prizes for
coming second. The race to find the winning formula involves endless rounds
of testing and even minor adjustments in formulation can lead to significantly
improved performance. Akcros Chemicals turned to CambridgeSofts
ChemOffice to co-ordinate the cooperation of their centres across Europe.
Akcros Chemicals in The Netherlands is a business unit of Akzo Nobel
and has expertise in the area of polymer additives. The laboratory tests
new formulations in conjunction with other Akcros centres.
Dr Harvey uses ChemOffice (supplied and supported by Adept Scientific)
to sort, categorise, and keep track of the wide range of organic chemicals,
which the company tests in its search for useful properties.
Using ChemFinder - the database feature within ChemOffice - the laboratory
has set up an information management system for the compounds, with forms
and sub forms covering different formulations for different compounds.
All these formulations can be stored in a database along with drawings
of structures, captions, and notes. The database catalogues which compounds
have been tested and the results of those tests, together with the compounds
as yet untested.
The database is a valuable tool for looking at different groups with
different functionality. It is easy to carry out structure searches. Using
ChemFinder to store the results allows the comparison of the performance
of various compounds. A different subform is used for each of the numerous
possible test system formulations and records subsequent performance.
If standard products are used, the performance of new compounds can be
compared - even if the original test was carried out in a geographically
different location.
As the layout of the forms and subforms are generated completely from
scratch, the inclusion of code names is easy to cross-reference with chemical
names/supplier/ batch numbers etc. All of these items are then searchable.
Chemfinder lets you archive results in a format which does not deteriorate
with time, takes up little or no storage space and is totally searchable
electronically, either by structure/substructure or keywords/codes.
The reporting tool used to display the hit list is also very useful and
can be used to view a virtual image of the test results as seen by the
chemist the day they were prepared.
I have also imported databases from outside sources to then try
combinatorial chemistry on a small scale, explains Dr Harvey. The
CombiChem/Excel addin allows for simple modelling of parameters e.g. Bpt,
Mpt etc. These can then be used to choose which of a range of possible
structural variants you use your resources to make.
The Akcros laboratories in the Netherlands are working closely with laboratories
in Germany and the United Kingdom. Using this database they can share
the same information and avoid duplication of effort. It is planned to
develop a shared server to make this joint resource more easily accessible.
The software is very intuitive with self-explanatory icons,
says Dr Harvey. When I started with the software, I did not need
to go to the manual at all - I could do whatever I wanted after spending
only a little time playing around with the program.
Users can draw the chemical structure of a compound simply and directly
on-screen using the pre-set chemical bond and structure symbols and then
store the structure with the information.
So is there anything we could do to improve it? I do have one point,
says Dr Harvey. It would be great to make E-Notebook (another element
of Chem-Office) available on a pocket PC. As a chemist, I find I am writing
the same information on a note-book, on the PC and on a report. If we
could extend the notetaking capabilities of ChemOffice to a hand-held
organiser...?
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