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The lecturers as well as the participants came from varied
scientific backgrOlUldsfor the NATO -Advanced Study Institute
(ASDheld atAltinoluk, Edremit. Turkey during the period of July 31
-August 12 1989. The lecturers were University Professors from the
USA, Canada, England, C'-.ermany, France and Spain and they covered
a broad spectrwn of specialities from methodology t.o appications.
On the other hand students coming from the various NATO countries
arrived with an inhomogeneous background to absorb the broad
spectnUIl of material covered by the lecturers. However, by the end
of the two week period of the ASI, that initial difference in
scientific background had been reduced substantially . The
lecturers had covered subject matters from the most fundamental to
the most applied aspects of theoretical and computational organic
chemistry. The lectures were argnmented with tutorial sessions and
computational laboratory led by a small group of carefnlly selected
tutors. Overall, this NATO -ASI was a ~at success and the Editors
are hopeful that the present volume will communicate the scientific
success and will radiate the intellectual spirit of the meeting.
People who attended the NATO Advanced Study Institute (ASI)
entitled NEW THEORETICAL CONCEPTS FOR UNDERSTANDING ORGANIC REAC
TIONS held at Sant Feliu de Gufxols on the Costa Brava of Spain had
a unique experience. They have seen the evolution of the field from
qualitative arguments through the generation of Potential Energy
Surfaces (PES) to the use of PES in molecular dynamics. The
excellent lectures that were dedicated to the various aspects of
Potential Energy Surfaces clearly revealed a colossal amount of ma
terial that represents our current understanding of the overall
problem. It is our hope that the present volume will recreate the
excitement in the readers that we all experienced during the
meeting in Spain. One can say, without too much exaggeration, that
chemistry has become and exercise on potential energy surfaces
(PES). Structural (position of the energy minima), spectroscopic
(vicinity around the minima), and reactivity (reaction path along
the surface) properties may be determined from the analysis of PES.
New theoretical tools, together with recent developments in
computer technology and programming, have allowed to obtain a
better knowledge of these surfaces, and to extract further chemical
information from them, so new horizons have been added to
Theoretical Organic Chemistry."
Organophosphorus Chemistry presents a groundbreaking resource in
this branch of organic chemistry that demonstrates how
phosphorus-containing compounds can be manipulated in a variety of
organic reactions. The authors give an overview of the newest
trends and synthesis strategies, introduce bioactive and
environmentally friendly organophosphorus compounds and show their
importance in mainstream organic chemistry.
The lecturers as well as the participants came from varied
scientific backgrOlUldsfor the NATO -Advanced Study Institute
(ASDheld atAltinoluk, Edremit. Turkey during the period of July 31
-August 12 1989. The lecturers were University Professors from the
USA, Canada, England, C'-.ermany, France and Spain and they covered
a broad spectrwn of specialities from methodology t.o appications.
On the other hand students coming from the various NATO countries
arrived with an inhomogeneous background to absorb the broad
spectnUIl of material covered by the lecturers. However, by the end
of the two week period of the ASI, that initial difference in
scientific background had been reduced substantially . The
lecturers had covered subject matters from the most fundamental to
the most applied aspects of theoretical and computational organic
chemistry. The lectures were argnmented with tutorial sessions and
computational laboratory led by a small group of carefnlly selected
tutors. Overall, this NATO -ASI was a ~at success and the Editors
are hopeful that the present volume will communicate the scientific
success and will radiate the intellectual spirit of the meeting.
The papers in this volume were presented at the NATO Advanced Study
Institute held in Porto Novo, Portugal, August 26 - September 8,
1990. The Institute has been able to cover a wide spectrum of the
Theoretical and Computational Models for organic molecules and
organic reactions, ranging from the ab initio to the more empirical
approaches, in the tradition established in the previous Institutes
at S. Feliu de Guixols (Spain) and Altinoluk (Turkey). The
continuity with this work was achieved by inviting half of the
lecturers present in those meetings. But other important subjects
were also covered at Porto Novo by new lecturers, both from
universities and the industry. Molecular Mechanics, Protein
Structure and Unidimensional Models were introduced by the first
time. The concept of building on the expertise already acquired and
available, both in terms of methods and contents, to develop in new
directions, was appreciated by participants and lecturers. The
Institute first considered the fundamentals of molecular orbital
computations and ab initio methods and the construction of
Potential Energy Surfaces. These subjects were further explored in
several applications related with optimization of equilibrium
geometries and transition structures. Practical examples were
studied in Tutorial sessions and solved in the computational
projects making use of the Gaussian 88 and Gaussian 90 programs.
Empirical models can be complementary to the quantum-mechanical
ones in equilibrium geometry optimizations.
As a general rule any interdisciplinary subject and that includes
Computational Theoretical Organic Chemistry (CTOC) incorporates
people from the two overlaping areas. In this case the overlaping
areas are Computational Theoretical Chemistry and Organic
Chemistry. Since CTOC is a relatively young science, people
continue to shift from their major discipline to this area. At this
particular time in history we have to accept in CTOC people who
were trained in Computational Theoretical Chemistry and do not know
very much about Organic Chemistry, but more often the opposite case
is operative Experimental Organic Chemistry who have not been
exposed to Computational Theoretical Chemistry. This situation made
NATO Advanced Study Institute in the field of CTOC necessary. The
inhomogenity outlined above was present in the NATO Advanced Study
Institute, held at Menton in July 1980, and to some degree it is
noticable from the content of this volume. This book contains 20
contributions. The first contribution is an Introduc tion chapter
in which the initiated experimental chemists are briefed about the
subject matter. The last chapter describes very briefly the
"Computational Laboratory" that was designed to help people with an
experimental back ground in order to obtain some first hand
experience. Between the first and the last chapters there are 18
contributions. These contributions were arranged in a spectrum from
the exclusively method oriented papers to the applications of
existing computational methods to problems of interest in Organic
Chemistry."
People who attended the NATO Advanced Study Institute (ASI)
entitled NEW THEORETICAL CONCEPTS FOR UNDERSTANDING ORGANIC REAC
TIONS held at Sant Feliu de Gufxols on the Costa Brava of Spain had
a unique experience. They have seen the evolution of the field from
qualitative arguments through the generation of Potential Energy
Surfaces (PES) to the use of PES in molecular dynamics. The
excellent lectures that were dedicated to the various aspects of
Potential Energy Surfaces clearly revealed a colossal amount of ma
terial that represents our current understanding of the overall
problem. It is our hope that the present volume will recreate the
excitement in the readers that we all experienced during the
meeting in Spain. One can say, without too much exaggeration, that
chemistry has become and exercise on potential energy surfaces
(PES). Structural (position of the energy minima), spectroscopic
(vicinity around the minima), and reactivity (reaction path along
the surface) properties may be determined from the analysis of PES.
New theoretical tools, together with recent developments in
computer technology and programming, have allowed to obtain a
better knowledge of these surfaces, and to extract further chemical
information from them, so new horizons have been added to
Theoretical Organic Chemistry."
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