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1 owing superior performance to a well-trained chemist.
2  been the domain of the expert computational chemist.
3 al of techniques available to the modern day chemist.
4 s has much to offer to the synthetic organic chemist.
5 , is well suited to the sensibilities of the chemist.
6 y depend on whether you ask a physicist or a chemist.
7 ent significant challenges for any synthetic chemist.
8 worked at du Pont for 42 years as a research chemist.
9 challenging goal for the synthetic inorganic chemist.
10  are a constant source of inspiration to the chemist.
11 paper reveals the human side of this eminent chemist.
12 ng to the Association of Official Analytical Chemists.
13  be a little less familiar to organometallic chemists.
14 reactor engineers and colloidal nanomaterial chemists.
15 ions and an unsolved challenge for synthetic chemists.
16 characterization tool for surface analytical chemists.
17 proteins should be of interest to biological chemists.
18 versatile tools in the repertoire of organic chemists.
19 zonolysis continues to challenge atmospheric chemists.
20 kage presents a great challenge to synthetic chemists.
21  in Nature, they remain elusive to synthetic chemists.
22  reactions remains a challenge for synthetic chemists.
23 al interest for both medicinal and synthetic chemists.
24 quire time and effort investment from expert chemists.
25 tractive targets for synthetic and medicinal chemists.
26 ty of medicinal, agricultural, and materials chemists.
27 poses an exceptional challenge to analytical chemists.
28 l knowledge of energetic science new to most chemists.
29  to becoming a mainstream tool for medicinal chemists.
30 cognosists, natural products, and ecological chemists.
31 th ease, it remains a difficult task for the chemists.
32  have attracted the interest of many organic chemists.
33  synthetic value for academic and industrial chemists.
34 ns have become an important tool for organic chemists.
35 y applied to problems of interest to organic chemists.
36 e-containing chemical entities for medicinal chemists.
37 le targets for pharmaceutical and analytical chemists.
38  tension between computational and medicinal chemists.
39 t but challenging targets for supramolecular chemists.
40 ignificantly enrich the toolbox of synthetic chemists.
41 ed compounds is an aspirational goal for all chemists.
42 of significant interest among supramolecular chemists.
43 rt C-H bonds, which is a major challenge for chemists.
44  of the former that are favored by medicinal chemists.
45 mains a long-standing challenge to synthetic chemists.
46  a chemical template for inspiring medicinal chemists.
47 articular challenge to analysis for forensic chemists.
48 a challenge and an opportunity for synthetic chemists.
49 view of this important toolbox for medicinal chemists.
50 in nature and is often used by (bio-)organic chemists(7), enables a predetermined and site-selective
51 , this versatile reactivity offers medicinal chemists a general strategy to rapidly prepare and funct
52 ed drug design approaches can help medicinal chemists a long way toward discovering better drugs.
53 s, and radiometals offer radiopharmaceutical chemists a tremendous range of options with which to acc
54 dvancements in organic chemistry depend upon chemists' ability to interpret NMR spectra, though resea
55 ysis and chemo-catalysis increasingly offers chemists access to more diverse chemical architectures.
56 veloped in our laboratory broadens synthetic chemists' access to classes of photochemical cycloadditi
57                                         Many chemists acquire and utilize skills that are well beyond
58 dings will inform clinicians and therapeutic chemists alike as they strive to develop novel therapies
59 red the interest of synthetic and biological chemists alike.
60 erspective of computational and experimental chemists alike.
61                                The synthetic chemists always look for developing new catalysts, susta
62 xes: these two words jump to the mind of the chemist and are directly associated with their utility i
63 te to re-examine the life of this remarkable chemist and his legacy to heterocyclic chemistry.
64        This Review should be of interest for chemists and also physicists working in the fields of mo
65 cel, a familiar, easily accessed program for chemists and biologists.
66 ointly discuss the efforts of supramolecular chemists and biotechnologists who previously worked inde
67  this area as well as to encourage synthetic chemists and chemical engineers to address the challenge
68 orizations of cascade reactions by synthetic chemists and delineate the common underlying chemistry,
69  more comprehensible, both for synthetic POM chemists and for scientists with different backgrounds i
70 ke the subject more comprehensible, both for chemists and for scientists with different materials sci
71                       The goal is to inspire chemists and materials scientists and to give them hope
72 s critical review addresses the community of chemists and materials scientists to share with it a cri
73 ules are of particular interest to medicinal chemists and materials scientists.
74 mote a closer interaction between analytical chemists and modellers to identify models for biochemica
75                                              Chemists and non-allopathic practitioners do not treat w
76 ent applications will be useful to medicinal chemists and other investigators interested in the lates
77 ce is an important objective that challenges chemists and physicists in order to access an entirely n
78  of this review article is to help materials chemists and physicists, particularly students, in selec
79 on science (QIS) currently being explored by chemists and physicists.
80  enormous amount of attention from synthetic chemists and played an important role in the development
81 lementation details are determined by expert chemists and recorded in reusable recipe files, which ar
82 ction of N(2) have been a major challenge to chemists and the focus since now has mostly been on the
83                                Environmental chemists and toxicologists have moved beyond detecting a
84 source for medicinal chemists, computational chemists, and DMPK scientists working in drug design to
85 ors, including public and private providers, chemists, and non-allopathic practitioners.
86 clinicians, microbiologists, natural product chemists, and pharmacologists together with pharmaceutic
87 iew will serve to help materials scientists, chemists, and physicists, particularly students and youn
88 the origin of life in a manner accessible to chemists, and summarizes experiments suggesting several
89 quire strategic alignments among clinicians, chemists, and toxicologists.
90 his Review will be useful to a wide range of chemists, and will spur further research in this promisi
91 method of Association of Official Analytical Chemists (AOAC).
92                          Likewise, synthetic chemists are able to make ever more complex electrocatal
93                                      Organic chemists are able to synthesize molecules in greater num
94                                    Medicinal chemists are accountable for embedding the appropriate d
95      Inspired by the properties of graphene, chemists are also designing graphene-like molecules in w
96 ing what is becoming an environmental issue, chemists are currently developing solutions to add value
97 o optimize drug candidates, modern medicinal chemists are increasingly turning to an unconventional s
98 enzymes have evolved to approach perfection, chemists are interested to know the minimal active site
99                                    Medicinal chemists are often guided by the physicochemical propert
100     The biocatalytic transformations used by chemists are often restricted to simple functional-group
101 ries of unexplored chemical space, medicinal chemists are routinely turning to unusual strained biois
102                                              Chemists are still far from achieving the most obvious a
103 ange in large pharma including how medicinal chemists are trained.
104                                              Chemists are visual creatures who are adept at discernin
105  Crystallization is widely used by synthetic chemists as a purification technique because it usually
106  to stimuli have been developed by synthetic chemists as building blocks for molecular machines.
107 f this emerging field to organic and polymer chemists as well as materials scientists.
108 attempt to provide guidance to the synthetic chemist, as well as a perspective on both the challenges
109 duate and postgraduate training of medicinal chemists at GSK is also briefly described.
110     This raises a question: should medicinal chemists avoid making sulfonamide-containing compounds i
111 portance, such that biologists and synthetic chemists avoid pursuing phantom chemical entities.
112 gle-electron reductants available to organic chemists because it is effective in reducing and couplin
113 phisticated catalysts are rarely employed by chemists, because the substrate scope, selectivity and r
114 review will be important and informative for chemists, biochemists, physicists, materials scientists,
115                                              Chemists, biologists and clinicians, among other scienti
116 ussion on what might lie ahead for medicinal chemists, biologists, and physicians as they try to impr
117 , which should bring valuable information to chemists, biologists, pharmacologists and toxicologists.
118 ules will be discussed - providing synthetic chemists both with the understanding and the tools requi
119 ll-known to enzymologists and bio(inorganic) chemists but may be a little less familiar to organometa
120 f broad interest to materials scientists and chemists but remains a formidable challenge.
121 emistry is the ease with which the synthetic chemist can effect a wide range of transformations throu
122 addition, the needs of the synthetic organic chemist can often be met by flow cells operating with re
123  up a multitude of new possibilities for how chemists can modulate cellular function and behaviour an
124                        Microbes are nature's chemists, capable of producing and metabolizing a divers
125 laboration between synthetic and theoretical chemists (cf. the cerocene problem).
126                                              Chemists classify molecules according to characteristics
127 -PK should serve as a resource for medicinal chemists, computational chemists, and DMPK scientists wo
128 IUPAC (International Union of Pure & Applied Chemist)-condensed inputs to render Symbol Nomenclature
129 e "best practice" guidelines which will give chemists confidence in reported DSC results and the conc
130 n the focal point of interest of solid-state chemists, crystal engineers, and crystallographers from
131 useful and valuable tool for those medicinal chemists dealing with research programs focused on NS4B
132 : on the one hand, synthetic and biophysical chemists develop new fluorescent labels and isomorphic n
133 stic behavior, and profoundly change the way chemists discover and optimize reactions.
134                                    Medicinal chemists do not yet completely understand the nuances of
135 tracted significant attention from synthetic chemists due primarily to the historically synthetically
136 ted the attention of synthetic and medicinal chemists due to boron's ability to modulate enzyme funct
137 works, which have attracted the attention of chemists due to their natural product-like structures.
138 BCPs) have sparked the interest of medicinal chemists due to their recent discovery as bioisosteres o
139                     Utilizing the Artificial Chemist, eleven precision-tailored QD synthesis composit
140 atalyzed alkyne-azide cycloaddition, peptide chemists embraced transition metal catalysis as a powerf
141 rface between computational and experimental chemists, emphasizing the need for computation to predic
142 l nomenclature systems inorganic and organic chemists employ to describe these phenomena.
143        This has brought together biologists, chemists, engineers, physicists, and mathematicians to s
144 o help NMR spectroscopists and computational chemists estimate the ranges of the NMR shifts for an un
145 ure and medicinal chemistry, have fascinated chemists ever since their discovery.
146 o be of particular interest to the medicinal chemist for other reasons.
147               Iron-nitrosyls have fascinated chemists for a long time due to the noninnocent nature o
148 d porphyrins have attracted the attention of chemists for a long time in view of their diverse applic
149                 These features have inspired chemists for decades to seek artificial mimetics of prot
150  sought-after anticancer targets, has eluded chemists for decades until an irreversible covalent stra
151 zed cross-coupling of nitroarenes has eluded chemists for decades.
152 s, known as cyclo[n]carbons, have fascinated chemists for many years, but until now they could not be
153 been studied and exploited by supramolecular chemists for many years, most of this work has been cond
154 c alkynes and cyclic allenes, have intrigued chemists for more than a century with their unusual stru
155 erature, solvent, additives, etc., dissuades chemists from employing light-initiated reactions as a r
156 paradigm of chemical synthesis that relieves chemists from routine tasks, combining artificial intell
157 de, it has become increasingly recognized by chemists from various fields of synthetic chemistry such
158 hat this minireview will help more synthetic chemists gain insight into the design of CDC reactions a
159  the present day, a major challenge faced by chemists has been the separation of RE elements, which h
160                            Synthetic organic chemists have a long-standing appreciation for transitio
161                    Here, we will discuss how chemists have been able to harmonize the opposing functi
162                          Inspired by nature, chemists have been interested in developing synthetic cy
163                                              Chemists have been interested in the N-alkylation of a p
164                                 Fortunately, chemists have bridged this experimental gap through the
165                                              Chemists have created molecular machines and switches wi
166 n both biological and material settings, and chemists have developed an ever-increasing vernacular to
167 such bionanodevices, in the past few decades chemists have developed artificial prototypes of molecul
168 ently catalyze a variety of transformations, chemists have developed large numbers of dinuclear trans
169                                              Chemists have developed mechanistic insight into numerou
170 tivity of these Cu-dependent metalloenzymes, chemists have developed synthetic protocols to functiona
171                                    Synthetic chemists have devoted tremendous effort towards the prod
172 s Perspective is to illustrate how medicinal chemists have elegantly employed the gem-dimethyl group
173 n cited in the sentence that starts "Polymer chemists have employed strategies such as single monomer
174                                     However, chemists have exploited the unique properties of fluorin
175                               More recently, chemists have explored how NP analogues alter the retros
176                                    Synthetic chemists have focused on preparing such model compounds,
177                                              Chemists have had a long-standing interest in reactive i
178 ails of the synthesis process, we found that chemists have had preferences in the selection of substr
179         Over the past two decades, medicinal chemists have identified a number of chemical modificati
180                                              Chemists have long sought the ability to modify molecule
181 d by the normally harsh reaction conditions, chemists have long sought to develop catalytic variants
182 most productive, medicinal and computational chemists have made significant progress in delivering ne
183   The technology is easy to handle, and many chemists have managed to train themselves in its impleme
184                                      So far, chemists have only been able to synthesize monomer seque
185 nistic steps during biological N2 reduction, chemists have prepared iron complexes that mimic various
186                               Biologists and chemists have put forth a lot of effort toward understan
187 eactions stored in the Reaxys database, that chemists have reported new compounds in an exponential f
188                                              Chemists have spent over a hundred years trying to make
189 e to have a profound impact on human health, chemists have succeeded in generating semisynthetic anal
190                                    Recently, chemists have turned their attention to the development
191 spired by this time-tested moiety, medicinal chemists have widely explored its use in developing bioa
192 rvations is intended to assist the synthetic chemist in the design of new catalysts and the developme
193 omputational models can assist the medicinal chemist in this endeavour.
194 ce for both FBDD practitioners and medicinal chemists in general.
195  the authors of this review as computational chemists in pharma.
196 so highlight the opportunities for medicinal chemists in radiotracer development for bacterial infect
197  complexity, are a source of inspiration for chemists in the field of total synthesis for the develop
198 g adequate credit to the great creativity of chemists in the field.
199 al chemistry knowledge potentially useful to chemists in the pursuit of synthesizing metabolically st
200 unities that have been under-investigated by chemists in the selective probe and sensor field.
201 n seeking to extend the lexicon of synthetic chemists in this regard, we have developed an expedient
202 s and thereby serve as an efficient tool for chemists, including those interested in synthesis.
203                  In order to guide medicinal chemists into making more selective and potent Mcl-1 inh
204 generated from these studies, the Artificial Chemist is pre-trained to use a new batch of precursors
205                   In response, an Artificial Chemist is presented: the integration of machine-learnin
206                The training of new medicinal chemists is vital to the future of the field, and as gra
207                                              Chemists live off them." Thus, the detailed image analys
208 ous choices are now available to a synthetic chemist looking to utilize a Minisci-type reaction.
209             With the self-driving Artificial Chemist, made-to-measure inorganic perovskite quantum do
210 ith better potency: selection by a medicinal chemist, manual modeling, docking followed by manual fil
211 5th anniversary of the birth of the physical chemist Michael Polanyi, as well as the 40th of his deat
212 r, having been studied almost exclusively by chemists, molecular crystals still lack the appropriate
213 nterest for structural biologists, medicinal chemists, molecular modellers and teachers.
214                                              Chemists must play and active role in this effort.
215                                    Prebiotic chemists often study how modern biopolymers, e.g., pepti
216 e and up-to-date reference for the medicinal chemist on the structure-activity-toxicity of this impor
217 s that often present themselves to medicinal chemists optimizing their compounds for candidate select
218                                      Whether chemists or biologists, researchers dealing with metabol
219    The Soai reaction has profoundly impacted chemists' perspective of autocatalysis, chiral symmetry
220 1%, as a result of synergistic efforts among chemists, physicists, and engineers.
221  These developments will benefit biologists, chemists, physicists, and materials scientists alike.
222                 To the experienced molecular chemist, predicting the geometries and reactivities of a
223 , is a valuable transformation for medicinal chemists, providing a modular disconnection for the rapi
224                                              Chemists rely on organocatalysts or transition metal cat
225                Correction for 'The medicinal chemist's toolbox for late stage functionalization of dr
226 sidered as a routine part of every medicinal chemist's toolbox.
227 d on unraveling the content of the medicinal chemist's toolbox.
228 panding synthetic methodologies, a medicinal chemist's toolkit continues to swell.
229 t atomic resolution is a crucial tool in the chemist's toolset.
230 n constant use over the last half century by chemists seeking to functionalize heterocycles in a rapi
231 importance in both areas: mainstream organic chemists should feel comfortable taking this fork in the
232 red with non-sulfonamides and that medicinal chemists should not avoid use of the sulfonamide group.
233  this fork in the road, just as carbohydrate chemists should traveling in the opposite direction.
234 avier group 14 multiple bonds have intrigued chemists since more than a century.
235     Morphine has been a target for synthetic chemists since Robinson proposed its correct structure i
236 ural products have captured the attention of chemists since the isolation of the first members of the
237  to the conventional titration (American Oil Chemists' Society) and UV-Vis spectroscopic methods.
238 nd serves as a navigation tool for medicinal chemists, structural and cell biologists exploring ubiqu
239 onal, in order to provide inspiration to our chemists, suggest next steps in their work, and automate
240 o solids from the viewpoint of a solid-state chemist, summarizes techniques for growing single crysta
241                                  Clandestine chemists synthesize novel stimulant drugs by exploiting
242 bright future is ahead of the organometallic chemist, thanks to these novel technologies.
243 g on recent cases in order to give medicinal chemists the full scope of this strategy which has great
244                          This strategy gives chemists the tools to design and refine vast libraries,
245                             We hope to offer chemists the tools to have a good grasp of this singular
246        From the perspective of the medicinal chemist, the GRI is also important as a generalized mode
247                                      For MOF chemists, the chemical design space is a combination of
248  bond-containing products and may impact how chemists think of multistep synthetic sequences in the f
249 hoped that this Perspective will inspire the chemist to utilize quaternary carbon stereocenters to en
250 s a valuable synthetic roadmap for medicinal chemists to access a range of fluorinated therapeutic ca
251 esign and development challenge to medicinal chemists to achieve acceptable oral pharmacokinetics.
252 their work in DNA nanotechnology and inspire chemists to address current challenges and opportunities
253 ases, it will become increasingly useful for chemists to adopt the knot terminology employed by other
254 nalization chemistries has enabled medicinal chemists to consider a synthetic strategy, late stage fu
255 irect and feasible way for synthetic organic chemists to construct complicated molecules.
256 new transformation is presented that enables chemists to couple simple alkyl carboxylic acids with ar
257 ve-mentioned disorders and to help medicinal chemists to design novel dynamin ligands, which could be
258  of these enzymes have inspired bioinorganic chemists to design synthetic models to mimic their abili
259  into the design of network motifs, enabling chemists to develop "molecular software" to create funct
260 bs) in particular have stimulated analytical chemists to develop new methods and strategies for their
261  heterocyclic scaffolds has inspired organic chemists to discover several methodologies over recent y
262 polysubstituted cyclopropanes nowadays allow chemists to easily access these strained rings with high
263 us available stimuli, as tools for synthetic chemists to exploit.
264 thetic disconnection offer opportunities for chemists to explore and select more efficient syntheses/
265 egradation processes, and will stimulate the chemists to explore new chemical strategies to design sa
266 e machine learning algorithms can assist the chemists to faster search for the optimal reaction param
267  essential properties has inspired synthetic chemists to mimic these properties in artificial one-dim
268 ibition of single SCs has driven clandestine chemists to produce analogues of increasing structural d
269 , stimulated a furious worldwide effort from chemists to provide a solution for its preparation throu
270  is widely used by biologists, linguists and chemists to quantify similarity between pairs of phyloge
271 hts some of the strategies used by medicinal chemists to reduce DILI risk during the optimization of
272 tics is also due to the attempt of medicinal chemists to stabilize candidates toward cytochrome P450
273         The analytical toolbox available for chemists to study atmospheric organic components has exp
274  an attractive proposition because it allows chemists to synthetically tweak various kinetic and ther
275 inspired a new generation of natural product chemists to tackle powerful undeveloped scaffolds.
276 s an excellent tool for experimental organic chemists to understand, even to predict, the chemical or
277              C-H activation reactions enable chemists to unveil new retrosynthetic disconnections and
278 lization of C-H bonds will ultimately afford chemists transformative tools for editing and constructi
279 ed with unfamiliar reaction space, synthetic chemists typically apply the reported conditions (reagen
280 cus is on the strategies that supramolecular chemists use to emulate the efficiency of biological pro
281       Private healthcare providers including chemists were the first point of contact for the majorit
282 garded as benign and often used by medicinal chemists when attempting to avoid bioactivation.
283 within the binding site, directing medicinal chemists where to grow the molecule and alerting them to
284 his performance sets very high standards for chemists who aim at designing synthetic electrocatalysts
285       Here, we write to introduce analytical chemists who are new to the open-source movement to best
286        The intended audience is both quantum chemists who seek to learn more about quantum computing
287 pect that should be considered by analytical chemists who use MCR methods.
288  to molecular masterpieces devised by expert chemists whose properties are now being exploited far be
289      This Perspective provides the medicinal chemist with background and advice on the art and proces
290 self to his students, colleagues, and fellow chemists with an aura of nobility and romanticism.
291 its druglike properties, providing medicinal chemists with an unconventional strategy for replacing a
292 ester structural motif continues to intrigue chemists with its electrophilic and nucleophilic sites.
293 mistry principles and provide supramolecular chemists with meaningful understanding for tuning hydrog
294 vated photoredox catalysts provide synthetic chemists with the unprecedented capability to harness re
295                      Flow equipment provides chemists with unique control over reaction parameters en
296 e single-electron redox events have provided chemists with useful tools for solving synthetic problem
297       More recently, however, supramolecular chemists - with their expertise in macrocyclic synthesis
298 lecule is of great interest to computational chemists, with applications in in silico materials desig
299 of which could arguably be designed by human chemists within minutes, without the help of a computer.
300 fundamental challenges for the bioanalytical chemist working in living tissue samples as well as best

 
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