Encyclopedia > Simplified Molecular Input Line Entry Specification

  Article Content

Simplified Molecular Input Line Entry Specification

The Simplified Molecular Input Line Entry Specification, or SMILES for short, is a specification for unambiguously describing the structure of chemicals using ASCII character strings. With a little bit of practice, these strings can be written, read, and understood directly; several molecular software packages can read or generate SMILES strings.

Atoms are represented by the standard abbreviation of the chemical elements, in square brackets, such as [Au] for gold. Hydroxide anion[?] is [OH-]. If the brackets are omitted, the proper number of implicit hydrogen atoms is assumed; for instance the SMILES for water is simply O and that for ethanol is CCO. The double-bonded carbon dioxide is represented as O=C=O and the triple-bonded hydrogen cyanide as C#N. Cyclohexane[?] is represented as C1CCCCC1, the idea being that the two ones label the same position in the molecule, thus forming a ring with six carbons. Branches are described with parentheses, as in CCC(=O)O for propionic acid[?] and FC(F)F, or alternatively C(F)(F)F, for fluoroform[?].

The SMILES specification was developed by David Weininger in the late 1980s.


External links:



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Michael Barrymore

... Barrymore - Wikipedia <<Up     Contents Michael Barrymore Michael Barrymore, born 4 May 1952, is a British comedian famous for his variety ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 31.6 ms