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WANTED: A Home for an Orphaned Chemical Database

Published/Copyright: December 16, 2016
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LOGKOW—a databank of evaluated octanol-water partition coefficients

The octanol-water partition coefficient (Log Kow, Log P) is a laboratory-measured property of a pure substance (gas, liquid or solid). Its importance for chemists is comparable to that of vapour pressure, solubility, Henry’s law constant, melting and boiling points, etc. In particular, partition coefficients have been used extensively:

  1. in the design of new drugs and pharmaceuticals

  2. as a key parameter for modeling the fate of organic pollutants in soil, natural waters and the atmosphere

  3. as a quantitative measure of the hydrophilic/lipophilic balance of an organic compound

  4. in investigation of quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSAR) of organic compounds

The database was created in 1987 and has been continuously updated ever since. Currently it contains experimental data on about 29,000 organic and organometallic compounds. LOGKOW contains no calculated or estimated data.

Each compound is identified by molecular formula, IUPAC name, and Chemical Abstracts Registry Number. A pKa value is given, where appropriate. Also included is a S.M.I.L.E.S. string of characters which represents the three-dimensional structure (connectivity) of the molecule. For every numerical Log Kow datum, a literature source reference is given, in Chemical Abstracts style. Also, experimental conditions of measurement are noted (temperature, equilibration method, analytical method, nature of the aqueous phase, and which phases were analyzed). If the original data source reference gave a reference describing the experimental method, this secondary reference was included. Where warranted, a Recommended Log Kow value is indicated. The database can be searched by the molecular formula or Registry Number of the compound of interest.

The database, as a Java application, was hosted for 10 years by the National Research Council of Canada (Ottawa), with free access available via the Internet. The database, although it still exists, is no longer generally available for the use of chemists. The present communication is a call for an appropriate institution to restore LOGKOW to its rightful place on the Internet.

For further information, contact:

James Sangster, Sangster Research Laboratories

P. O. Box 49562

5122 Côte-des-Neiges

Montreal, Quebec, Canada

H3T 2A5

Telephone: +1- 514-340-4711, #3922

Online erschienen: 2016-12-16
Erschienen im Druck: 2016-12-1

©2016 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

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