German handbook/encyclopedia of inorganic compounds initiated by Leopold Gmelin
The Gmelin database is a large database of organometallic and inorganic compounds updated quarterly. It is based on the German publication Gmelins Handbuch der anorganischen Chemie ("Gmelin's Handbook of Inorganic Chemistry") which was originally published by Leopold Gmelin in 1817;[1] the last print edition, the 8th, appeared in the 1990s. Although published over many decades, the printed series was not uniform in coverage or currency. Some elements are represented only by decades-old and not updated slim summary volumes. Others (Fe, B, S, F, U, etc.) have numerous supplements. Most later supplement volumes focused on an element's organic complexes. Each volume lists its literature coverage date.[2]
The database currently contains every compound/reaction discovered between 1772 and 1995, amounting to 1.5 million compounds and 1.3 million different reactions, with over 85,000 titles, keywords and abstracts. It has over 800 different data fields on subjects such as the compounds' electric, magnetic, thermal, crystal and physiological information.
The Gmelin database is maintained by Elsevier MDL. It is the sister database to the Beilstein database, which deals with organic chemicals and reactions; both are now part of the Reaxys system. The Gmelin database is less complete and less up-to-date than the handbook; the printed book is consequently kept available.[2]
^Brockhaus ABC Chemie, VEB F. A. Brockhaus Verlag Leipzig 1965, pp. 497–498.
^ ab"LibGuides: Chemistry: Gmelin Handbook". University of Texas. 29 July 2022.
The Gmelindatabase is a large database of organometallic and inorganic compounds updated quarterly. It is based on the German publication Gmelins Handbuch...
Sibirica Leopold Gmelin (1788–1853), German chemist, son of Johann Friedrich Gmelin's test, a chemical test introduced by GmelinGmelindatabase, a German...
Reaxys is complemented by information drawn from Gmelin (which gives access to the GmelinDatabase), a very large repository of organometallic and inorganic...
Johann Friedrich Gmelin (8 August 1748 – 1 November 1804) was a German naturalist, chemist, botanist, entomologist, herpetologist, and malacologist. Johann...
Leopold Gmelin (2 August 1788 – 13 April 1853) was a German chemist. Gmelin was a professor at the University of Heidelberg. He worked on the red prussiate...
This is a list of websites that contain lists of chemicals, or databases of chemical information. There is further detail on the content of these and...
observed in the mid-1980s. The neutral molecule is the first entry in the Gmelindatabase. Since HeH+ cannot be stored in any usable form, its chemistry must...
americanus Gmelin, 1792 C. anglicus Gmelin, 1792 C. antarcticus Gmelin, 1792 C. aprinus Gmelin, 1792 C. aquaticus Linnaeus, 1758 C. aquatilis Gmelin, 1792...
pollicipes. Alan Southward (December 21, 2004). "Pollicipes pollicipes (Gmelin, 1789)". European Register of Marine Species. MarBEF Data System. Charles...
exists only as a hybrid population. First described by Johann Friedrich Gmelin in 1788, the morepork was thought to be the same species as the Australian...
wigeon was formally described in 1789 by German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin in his revised and expanded edition of Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae....
was formally described in 1789 by the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin in his revised and expanded edition of Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae....
was named in honor of Johann Georg Gmelin (1709-1755). USDA, NRCS (n.d.). "Ranunculus gmelinii". The PLANTS Database (plants.usda.gov). Greensboro, North...
from the Arctic region or from Siberia.[citation needed] Johann Friedrich Gmelin described the type as Canis pomeranus in his 1788 revision of Systema Naturae...
is 0 m. Maximum recorded depth is 33 mm (1.3 in). Lithopoma americanum (Gmelin, 1791). Retrieved through: World Register of Marine Species on 20 April...
was formally described in 1788 by the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin in his revised and expanded edition of Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae....
description of the black redstart was by the German naturalist Samuel Gottlieb Gmelin in 1774 under the binomial name Mottacilla ochruros. The species is now...
was formally described in 1789 by the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin in his revised and expanded edition of Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae....
was formally described in 1789 by the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin in his revised and expanded edition of Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae....