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Finishing Up. Complete discussion of CIF Molecular Geometry Parameters s.u.'s Producing Tables. RECIPROCALNET. Programs for Working with cif. Publcif Available from http://journals.iucr.org/sercives/cif/publcif A nice cif editor. Encifer
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Finishing Up • Complete discussion of CIF • Molecular Geometry Parameters • s.u.'s • Producing Tables. • RECIPROCALNET
Programs for Working with cif • Publcif • Available from http://journals.iucr.org/sercives/cif/publcif • A nice cif editor. • Encifer • Available from http://www.ccdc.cam.ac.uk/free_services/encifer • Both an editor and checker
Verifying cif's • PLATON can be used to check a cif—start PLATON with the ciffile as input • Provides three levels of errors • A errors are serious and must be addressed • B errors are less serious • C errors may or may not be real • PLATON validation must always be viewed with a grain of salt as it can be completely incorrect.
IUCr services • If you do not have PLATON you can email your cif to checkcif@iucr.org • The cif should be the body of the email • You will get a report back in several minutes • If you place the manuscript in the cif you can obtain a copy of the manuscript back by mailing to printcif@iucr.org
Cif generation at Purdue • The program cifgen is used to create a cif. • Unfortunately all the table programs run from a different software package call MOLEN • The data in this package is stored in a binary (non text) file and cannot be read by humans • There is software to go from SHELXTL to MOLEN which is best run automatically during table creation. • There is the cif xl.cif produced by SHELXL which has the structure but it incomplete
Reflection Data in Cif • A second cif file is produced called xl.fcf • This contains the h,k,l, Fobs, σF, and Fcalc. • This does not need to be routinely submitted to most journals.
Publishing Structures with CIF • The IUCr journals require that the entire manuscript be in one cif. • Most of the ACS journals require that a single cif be included as supplementary material. • Some journals require that the cif be deposited with the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre (CCDC) when the manuscript is submitted. This is done at their website www.ccdc.cam.ac.uk. • Be sure you edit the authors before submitting.
Distances and Angles • Angles and distances are calculated as we saw earlier using formulas based on dot products of non-orthogonal coordinates • In general the distances and angles are obtained from the xl.cif file produced by SHELX.
S.U.'s on Geometric Parametes • There are many ways to calculate these. • For example • Use the variances or co-variances? • Should the errors in the cell constants be included? • At one time the s.u.'s were multiplied by the goof parameter but there is no statistical reason for doing this and the procedure has disappeared.
What are s.u.'s from least squares • Essentially the s.u.'s are a measure of how changing a parameter effects the results of the least squares. • Heavy atom structures • The heavy atoms will always have small s.u. • The light atoms will have higher s.u.'s than in an organic structure—they make less difference in the final r-factor. • The s.u.'s on hydrogen atoms are always an order of magnitude greater than carbon.
S.U.'s vs standard deviations • It is possible to determine the standard deviation of geometric parameters • There is no question that the s.u.'s are an under estimate of the standard deviation. • They are off by at least √2 • Always use 3 x s.u. when comparing geometric parameters!
Other Geometry Calculations • Torsion Angles • Least Square Planes • Calculates the best plane through a series of atoms • Provides statistics on how planar the arrangement is • Can calculate distance of an atom to the plane • Calculate the angles between the planes. • Centroid—simply average the coordinates
Producing Tables at Purdue • Everything is in a program called tables. • Does many things for you. • Converts SHELX data to MOLEN and does various analyses • Uses history collected during structure solution and refinement • Needs to know if DENZO or EVAL was used. • Creates input and runs prequest to add data to a local Cambridge Structural Database. • Creates all the table files
Creates the label for the cd disk • Creates the cd disk • Archives the data to another hard disk • Runs a web browser to create a RECIPROCAL net file system • Loads files to the RECIPROCAL net
Table Files • Most files are in rtf (rich text format) which can be read with any word processor. • RTF files • exp.rtf – a description of the procedures used. • data.rtf –a brief data table • inorganic.chem – a short table needed for the journal Inorganic Chemistry • bond.rtf –a table of bond distances • angle.rtf –a table of bond angles
xyz.rtf – atom positions • u.rtf – anisotropic adp's • torsion.rtf – torsion angles. • fofc.rtf – observed and calculated data • hydro.rtf – hydrogen bonding • CIF files • ciffile.dat – the cif file • fofc.dat – the cif of the data • Absolute Configuration Files • ent.txt – the output of the Bijvoet analysis • RS.txt – a list of the RS configuration of enantiomorphic atoms
Miscellaneous Files • .pdb – a file in the Protein Database Format. Can be used for input to ChemDraw • .mol – a file in another crystallographic format
Archiving • All the important files including all the raw data are written to a cd. • This file is given to the user and is the only output provided • This is the only place the raw data is archived • The files are copied to a different disk reached by /old/home/temp/strucname. • The table and other files are written to the RECIPROCALNET • Some data is stored in a local csd database.
RECIPROCAL NET • This is a distributed data base and lab management system. • Created at IU • Used by 18 labs world wide • Everything is done over the web • All structures are kept on this • All data is password protected for 5 years or until publish • Each group is entitled to 1 or more accounts for access
What is on RECIPNET • All the table files needed to work on or publish a structure • A JAVA graphics system for looking at results • Some tables summarizing the crystallographic data. • This can be searched by anyone for public structures and by a user after logging in for his structures.