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Unanswered Questions

8,738 questions with no upvoted or accepted answers
11 votes
1 answer
144 views

Is gallium slippery at room temperature in an inert atmosphere?

Ice is slippery when it isn't too far below it's melting point because the surface molecules are less loosely bound than the bulk and form a thin liquid layer. Pressure melting is a much smaller ...
11 votes
0 answers
1k views

Role of pH in azo C-coupling reaction, continued

In the question, "What is the role of pH in azo coupling reaction of diazonium with phenol and aniline?" asked by @DhrubaBanerjee and answered by @Klaus-DieterWarzecha, I find several ends ...
11 votes
0 answers
1k views

Understanding two-electron integrals in Gaussian 09

I was comparing the two-electron integrals (electron repulsion integrals, ERI) printed by various well-established packages (Gaussian, GAMESS, Molpro etc.) and observed that Gaussian is the oddball in ...
11 votes
1 answer
303 views

What is this golden looking substance?

I am currently messing around with gallium compromising aluminum. I am using a titalium lock which is just a brand of aluminum padlock and I put a gallium-indium euctic alloy on the surface of it. It’...
11 votes
0 answers
93 views

Is there a structured data source containing information on the World Health Organisation's Stability Testing Policies?

Hoping to automate some product testing guidance software, I've been attempting to find a (hopefully live, up-to-date) Database, Web-service, or other structured data source containing the ...
11 votes
1 answer
578 views

Color of methoxy substituted phenyl rings when heated in the presence of acid

Anyone who's familiar with organic synthesis will probably have came across the DMB and PMB protecting groups. When TLC-ing compounds containing these protecting groups using common stains like ...
11 votes
0 answers
256 views

Density Functional Theory with Generalized Gradient Approxmations (GGA) - What Happens if the Electron Density Shows a "Kink" at the Ion Position?

My question may be stupid, so please correct me if you find anything which is obviously erroneous. In the following I will place a question mark (?) besides points/steps I consider doubtful. My ...
10 votes
0 answers
88 views

Doubt in Zeeman effect for sodium spectrum

I am reading an atomic molecular physics book (for Indian universities). You may not familiar with it. But you can download it from the link if you wish. So in the book it is mentioned that for normal ...
10 votes
0 answers
141 views

Using symmetry and group theory arguments to explain iron(II) in a tetrahedral crystal field

I am trying to figure out how to explain $1s \rightarrow 3d$ spectroscopic transitions for $\ce{Fe^{2+}}$ in $T_\mathrm{d}$ symmetry. These transitions make up the pre-edge region in K edge X-ray ...
10 votes
1 answer
519 views

Frontier orbital analysis of zinc-catalysed carbonyl-ene reaction

Q1. Is the $\sigma_\ce{C-H}$ bond a donor in this reaction? If not, then can we take the alternate combination (HOMO of alkene, LUMO of the $\ce{C-H}$ bond and, HOMO of the carbonyl)? Q2. We can also ...
10 votes
1 answer
328 views

Why are IUPAC's definitions of exo- and endothermic disconnected from the direction of heat flow?

I'm wondering if anyone can provide a rationale for IUPAC's definitions of exothermic and endothermic since they disconnect these terms from the direction of heat flow. Specifically, here are IUPAC's ...
10 votes
0 answers
94 views

Does the alpha effect apply to third row elements?

Alkylperoxy anions are stronger nucleophiles than alkoxides (the so-called alpha effect), but would an alkyldisulfide anion be a better nucleophile than an alkylthiolate anion?
10 votes
0 answers
2k views

Why is the bond angle of N-N-N in hydrogen azide not 180 degrees?

Chen and Wang (2009) have reported an $\ce {N-N-N}$ bond angle in the hydrazoic acid molecule of $171.5$ degrees using B3LYP/6-311G** model. The wikipedia page for the molecule also reports a similar ...
10 votes
0 answers
172 views

In a molecular dynamics context, is the methyl rotation in propene a symmetric or asymmetric internal rotor?

In a prior question, I asked about the (a)symmetry of the potential energy surface of the methyl rotation of propene. In that context, the kinetic energy of the nuclear motions is of course assumed ...
10 votes
0 answers
109 views

Which potentials are suitable for molecular dynamics simulation of simple explicit solvents?

Which potentials (force fields) are suitable for adequately simulating (mixtures of) explicit solvents? Interesting rheological properties include viscosity, surface tension, heat capacity.

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