Chemistry Databases
Chemical Element eBooks
Science Online
TIP: Don’t copy or bookmark the URL in the browser, get the URL from the citation. The browser URL may not work later!
For home access: see the Haiku OHS Library page (under the ‘Extras’ tab) for passwords
Chemistry Websites
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Royal Society of Chemistry’s Interactive Periodic Table The Royal Society of Chemistry’s interactive periodic table features history, alchemy, podcasts, videos, and data trends across the periodic table.
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Los Alamos: Periodic Table Click on an element for history, properties and uses
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Jefferson Lab: Periodic Table Click on an element for properties and compounds. Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (Jefferson Lab) is one of 17 national laboratories funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
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Web Elements This interactive periodic table includes information about uses and characteristics of elements in everyday life.
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Chemicool Periodic Table Interactive information from and about the periodic table of elements. This site contains advertisements and was created by a Chemical Engineer.
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ASC periodic table Periodic Table Live! allows you to explore a broad range of information about the elements, their reactions, their properties, their structures, and their histories
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Household products database The Household Products Database of the National Library of Medicine is based on the Consumer Product Information Database. This database links over 11,000 consumer brands to health effects from Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS) provided by manufacturers and allows scientists and consumers to research products based on chemical ingredients.
Videos
Period Table of Videos
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TedEd Periodic Table A clickable periodic table with videos on every element from TED-Ed and Brady Haran, the creator of the YouTube channel Numberphile.
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The periodic table of videos A short video about each element in the periodic table, produced by trained chemists (don’t try this at home).
Bytesize science playlist: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLB6A2947FFC507110
Nova: Elements
Watch the full episode here: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/physics/hunting-elements.html
General Science Resources
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Science.gov search databases and websites from 12 federal agencies
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World Wide Science Maintained by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Scientific and Technical Information as the Operating Agent for the WorldWideScience Alliance
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Wolfram Alpha Computation engine. Find most any quantifiable fact about an element. Compare elements by entering their symbols in the search box: for example Be, Mg, Ca.