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Chemistry International
Vol. 24, No. 2
March 2002

 

Reliable Solubility Data in the Age of Computerized Chemistry: Why, How, and When? *


by John Rumble Jr., Angela Y. Lee, Dorothy Blakeslee, and Shari Young

IUPAC's Solubility Data Series (SDS), begun in the mid-1970s, is an exhaustive compilation and critical evaluation of all the world's published results of experimental determinations of solubility. Since 1979, over 70 SDS volumes have been published, including evaluated data on the solubility of gases in liquids, liquids in liquids, and solids in liquids. These volumes represent one of the largest collections of chemical property data ever produced and are the result of work of scientists throughout the world. Since 1998, and following an agreement with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the SDS compilations have been published four times a year in the Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data. Since January 2002, a Subcommittee on Solubility and Equilibrium Data of the IUPAC Analytical Chemistry Division has continued the coordination of the SDS-related projects.

Although IUPAC has worked to maintain high scientific standards and a uniform approach for data compilation and evaluation throughout its existence, the evolution of personal computing and the rise of the Internet have substantially changed the ways that research is conducted and results are made available. In 1980, most communication between compilers, evaluators, and editors occurred through the mail, and most critically evaluated research data were published commercially in printed volumes. Only a few hundred libraries—virtually all in developed countries—maintained standing orders for the SDS. Today, collaboration is primarily via electronic means, with drafts passed around the world as email attachments. Again with the help of NIST, and as described in this article, the computerization of the entire collection is being considered as a Web-accessible database.

> Introduction
> Data Evaluation and Reliability
> The NIST Data Programs
> NIST and IUPAC Solubility Data
> References

Introduction

Every aspect of chemistry is being affected by the growth of chemical informatics and the Internet/Web explosion. The once tedious task of building databases and disseminating them widely has become much easier. Today, some data gateways point to hundreds of Web sites that provide some type of chemical information. The accessibility of these data is part of a larger effort both to improve the quality of scientific data and to make them as widely available as possible. Before examining the details of computerizing IUPAC solubility data, it is useful to examine some of the broader aspects of scientific data.

Modern computers are profoundly changing the nature of 21st century chemistry research. Already, industrial development and innovation flow primarily from computer-aided design, model-based processing and manufacturing, and virtual testing. The confluence of increased computer power, advances in applied mathematics, and a new generation of highly computer-proficient scientists and engineers makes the move to model-based research inevitable.

Data Evaluation and Reliability

Modeling, regardless of the discipline, has one common feature: Reliable data are an essential element. Model-based science and engineering cannot function properly without a large data collection of known quality. The expression "garbage in, garbage out" applies in every instance. The generation and dissemination of reliable data is a complex process. Most scientific and technical data are generated in the course of research not specifically focused on data measurement and quality. In fact, most data are scattered throughout the technical literature and are poorly documented. Data users are not usually experts in how data were generated. Consequently, even if they find needed data, they cannot easily determine the quality of those data.

Several organizations collect and evaluate data so that researchers and others may use measurement results more confidently. The process of critically evaluating data involves four key steps:

  • collecting the data from the published literature;
  • reviewing and evaluating data by experts;
  • designing databases and publications to meet user needs; and
  • disseminating those data collections widely.

The evaluation of scientific data proceeds from three viewpoints. First, the data are evaluated with respect to how well their generation is documented. Have all independent variables affecting the measurement been identified? Have they all been controlled during the measurement?

And how have these facts been demonstrated and documented? The second viewpoint is how do the data follow the known laws of nature. The third viewpoint is how do the data compare with other measurements that purport to look at the same phenomena.

The mixture of these viewpoints depends on the maturity of the discipline and the existence of previous data evaluation efforts. In areas such as chemical thermodynamics and atomic spectroscopy, in which knowledge of the measurement technology is quite developed, the independent variables understood, and previous evaluations exist, the emphasis in new evaluations is on the latter two viewpoints. In areas in which measurements are fairly new, or the phenomena are quite complex and not totally understood, the emphasis must be on the first viewpoint.

The NIST Data Programs

NIST has long been interested in data evaluation. Beginning with the International Critical Tables1 in the 1920s, the National Bureau of Standards, which was renamed as the National Institute of Standards and Technology in 1987, operated a large number of data evaluation activities.2 Why is NIST interested in data evaluation? As the U.S. national laboratory concerned with advancing measurement science and technology, NIST considers data to be a fundamental result of measurements, both experimental and calculational. Data collections summarize previous measurement experience, and data evaluation therefore assesses the quality of current measurement technology.

NIST has unique, broad expertise in measurement technology, and the knowledge and experience necessary to perform data evaluation. NIST measurement experts are neutral (i.e., they do not favor any particular method except on merit). Data projects often involve partnerships on a national and international scale, and NIST has much experience in such partnerships in terms of sharing responsibility, costs, and outputs.

Today, NIST operates the Standard Reference Data Program, a network of data centers and projects covering about 40 scientific and technical disciplines. NIST operates 15 online data systems, available at no charge over the Web.3 It also sells about 45 individual use databases, usually installable on PCs.

For many years, NIST and the American Institute of Physics (AIP) have published the Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data. NIST and AIP are now committed to creating an electronic journal and, since 1 January 2000, an online, full-text version of the Journal has been available to subscribers. NIST is building a complementary database, which will contain important data from the tables and graphs of various articles. Eventually, we anticipate that the printed and online full-text version of the Journal will be greatly reduced in size, and the majority of data will be available through the Journal database.

NIST and IUPAC Solubility Data

In 1998, NIST and IUPAC signed an agreement to publish four volumes per year of the IUPAC SDS in the Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data. NIST is providing some help with respect to manuscript preparation, but the bulk of the work is still performed by the individual volume editors with funding raised from their own sources.

With the explosion of Web-based chemical information resources, IUPAC and NIST began discussions about how best to make the contents of the entire SDS available online. In 1999, NIST and IUPAC concluded an agreement to achieve this. Over the next five years, it is hoped that all data still valid will be made available via the Web at no charge. The remainder of this paper discusses these plans and the planned system. Because over 70 printed volumes have been printed, many of which are not available in computerized formats of any type, a subset has been selected to determine the best approach to important issues. The first subset deals with the solubility of halogenated hydrocarbons in water and covers four volumes: SDS 20 "Halogenated benzenes, toluenes and phenols with water" (1985), SDS 60 "Halogenated methanes with water" (1995), SDS 67 "Halogenated ethanes and ethenes in water" (1999), and SDS 68 "Halogenated aliphatic compounds C3 - C14 with water" (1999).

Building the NIST-IUPAC solubility data systems involves many activities, including the following:

  • data entry (for volumes not computerized)
  • data uniformity, including translation from old formats
  • data verification, that the numbers are entered or translated correctly
  • database design
  • interface design
  • search strategies
  • display formats

During the next few years, these issues will be explored using the subset of four volumes identified above as a test bed. A prototype database design has already been developed and data entry is proceeding for Vol. 20. While NIST is performing this work, IUPAC keeps playing an important role in giving advice, reviewing the proposed design, and checking the data.

The proposed system will contain compiled experimental data as well as the critically evaluated recommendations. The printed volumes do have a limited number of expressions and formats for the data. It is NIST's experience, however, that printed text often contains subtle inconsistencies and ambiguities that are identified only upon computerization.4 Additional problems exist in making computerized data uniform, especially if the definitive publication of the data is via printed page. For example, it is common practice for small changes to be made directly onto page proofs without alteration of the computer files that were input into an automated typesetting system. Documentation of such changes is usually nonexistent, which means that every number must be compared with the printed page, and discrepancies investigated.

In spite of the diverse data expressions, the search strategies are remarkably simple. As is widely recognized, the solubility of substance A in substance B can also be viewed as the solubility of substance B in substance A. Therefore, there is no need to designate uniquely the solute and solvent in designing the underlying database that stores the data, nor to constrain search strategies unreasonably.

The three search strategies that will definitely be supported are as follows:

  • find data on the solubility of substance A in substance B;
  • find data on the solubility of A; and
  • find data on the solubility of substances in substance B.

At first, searching on the solubility data themselves will not be supported, but depending on user needs, such as for liquid-liquid separations, this capability could be added later. To support these searches, methods for handling uncertainties need to be worked out. However, display of data in different units will be supported. In the future, additional features may be added, as requested by users, including performing calculations and generating plots.

For this project to be successful, NIST and IUPAC will have to work closely together on several issues, including system priorities, additional search strategies, interface design, data quality, system functionality, and display of results. The partnership is working successfully, as evidenced by the smooth transition to publication of new volumes of the SDS. Both parties look forward to a long relationship in order to make solubility data readily available via the Web.

References

1 E.W. Washburn (Ed.). International Critical Tables of Numerical Data, Physics, Chemistry, and Technology, published for the National Research Council by McGraw-Hill, New York (1926-30).

2 T.E. Gills et al., "NIST mechanisms for disseminating measurements," submitted for inclusion in NIST Journal of Research, 102, no. 1 (2001).

3 http://www.nist.gov/srd

4 J.H. Westbrook. J. Chem. Info. Comput. Sci. 33, 617 (1993). John Rumble Jr. is Chief of the NIST Standard Reference Data Program, Gaithersburg, Maryland, USA.

 

John Rumble Jr. is Chief of the NIST Standard Reference Data Program, Gaithersburg, Maryland, USA.

Further information about the SDS, including a list of volumes published and in preparation, is available on the SDS Web site. This site also contains email addresses of David Shaw, Heinz Gamsjäger, and Mark Salomon, members of the IUPAC Subcommittee on Equilibrium Data, who will gladly receive comments, questions, and proposals for future volumes.

 

This article was originally published in Pure and Applied Chemistry, Vol. 73, No. 5, pp. 825-829, 2001 as part of the lecture presented at the 9th IUPAC International Symposium on Solubility Phenomena, Hammamet, Tunisia, 25-28 July 2000.

 

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