Re: TOJC Experimental registry

Craig Fryhle (fryhle@u.washington.edu)
Mon, 2 Dec 1996 22:19:40 -0800 (PST)

Every compound has its own registry number assigned to it by the Chemical
Abstracts Service. They are not randomly assigned during the writing of a
paper. The registry number is like the compound's social security number.
Registry numbers are found on the MSDS sheets for chemicals, in the
catalog description of the chemicals (e.g. Aldrich), in the Dictionary of
Organic Compounds (in the Chem Conference Room), and elsewhere.

CBF

On Mon, 2 Dec 1996 becksm@PLU.edu wrote:

>
> I am a little confused on the registry numbers for the experimental
> section of the lab report. do we just randomly assign any numbers we want
> for the chemicals? I thought the example lab report we had said something
> about borrowing numbers from another paper. Please shed some light.
> thanks Steph
> becksm
>
>
>

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Craig B. Fryhle, Ph.D. Office 206-535-8314 FAX 206-536-5055
Associate Professor Email fryhle@u.washington.edu
Department of Chemistry URL http://rainier.chem.plu.edu/fryhle.html
Pacific Lutheran University
Tacoma, Washington 98447 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
^ ^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^ ^^^ ^^^^ ^^^ ^
^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^