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Can an InChI for Nano Address the Need for a Simplified Representation of Complex Nanomaterials across Experimental and Nanoinformatics Studies?

journal contribution
posted on 2020-12-18, 05:35 authored by Iseult Lynch, Anreas Afantitis, Thomas Exner, Martin Himley, Vladimir Lobaskin, Phillip Doganis, Dieter Maier, Natasha Sanabria, Anna Rybinska-Fryca, Maciej Gromelski, Tomasz Puzyn, Egon Willighagen, Blair Johnston, Mary Gulumian, Marianne Matzke, Amaia Green Etxabe, Nathan Bossa, Angela Serra, Irene Liampa, Stacey Harper, Tämm Kaido, Alexander CØ Jensen, Pekka Kohonen, Luke Slater, Andreas Tsoumanis, Dario Greco, David WinklerDavid Winkler, Haralambos Sarimveis, Georgia Melagraki

Chemoinformatics has developed efficient ways of representing chemical structures for small molecules as simple text strings, simplified molecular-input line-entry system (SMILES) and the IUPAC International Chemical Identifier (InChI), which are machine-readable. In particular, InChIs have been extended to encode formalized representations of mixtures and reactions, and work is ongoing to represent polymers and other macromolecules in this way. The next frontier is encoding the multi-component structures of nanomaterials (NMs) in a machine-readable format to enable linking of datasets for nanoinformatics and regulatory applications. A workshop organized by the H2020 research infrastructure NanoCommons and the nanoinformatics project NanoSolveIT analysed issues involved in developing an InChI for NMs (NInChI). The layers needed to captureNMstructures include but are not limited to: core composition (possibly multi-layered); surface topography; surface coatings or functionalization; doping with other chemicals; and representation of impurities. NM distributions (size, shape, composition, surface properties, etc.), types of chemical linkages connecting surface functionalization and coating molecules to the core, and various crystallographic forms exhibited by NMs also need to be considered. Six case studies were conducted to elucidate requirements for unambiguous description of NMs. The suggested NInChI layers are intended to

stimulate further analysis that will lead to the first version of a “nano” extension to the InChI standard.


History

Publication Date

2020-12-11

Journal

Nanomaterials

Volume

10

Issue

12

Article Number

2493

Pagination

1-44

Publisher

MDPI AG

ISSN

2493-2493

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