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      Synthesis and antifungal activity of halogenated aromatic bis-γ-lactones analogous to avenaciolide

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          Abstract

          Here we describe the total syntheses and characterization by elemental analyses, infrared and NMR spectroscopy of three new compounds analogous to avenaciolide, a bis-γ-lactone isolated from Aspergillus avenaceus that possesses antifungal activity, where the octyl group of the natural product was replaced by aromatic groups containing chlorine and fluorine atoms. The effects of the avenaciolide, the novel compounds and their synthetic precursors on mycelia development and conidia germination of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides and Fusarium solani were evaluated in vitro. The title compounds were almost as active as avenaciolide. The absolute structures of the chlorinated analogs were determined by X-ray diffraction analysis.

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          PASCal: A principal-axis strain calculator for thermal expansion and compressibility determination

          We describe a web-based tool (PASCal; Principal Axis Strain Calculator) aimed at simplifying the determination of principal coefficients of thermal expansion and compressibilities from variable-temperature and variable-pressure lattice parameter data. In a series of three case studies, we use PASCal to re-analyse previously-published lattice parameter data and show that additional scientific insight is obtainable in each case. First, the two-dimensional metal-organic framework Cu-SIP-3 is found to exhibit the strongest area-negative thermal expansion (NTE) effect yet observed; second, the widely-used explosive HMX exhibits much stronger mechanical anisotropy than had previously been anticipated, including uniaxial NTE driven by thermal changes in molecular conformation; and, third, the high-pressure form of the mineral malayaite is shown to exhibit a strong negative linear compressibility (NLC) effect that arises from correlated tilting of SnO6 and SiO4 coordination polyhedra.
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            Simple, defensible sample sizes based on cost efficiency.

            The conventional approach of choosing sample size to provide 80% or greater power ignores the cost implications of different sample size choices. Costs, however, are often impossible for investigators and funders to ignore in actual practice. Here, we propose and justify a new approach for choosing sample size based on cost efficiency, the ratio of a study's projected scientific and/or practical value to its total cost. By showing that a study's projected value exhibits diminishing marginal returns as a function of increasing sample size for a wide variety of definitions of study value, we are able to develop two simple choices that can be defended as more cost efficient than any larger sample size. The first is to choose the sample size that minimizes the average cost per subject. The second is to choose sample size to minimize total cost divided by the square root of sample size. This latter method is theoretically more justifiable for innovative studies, but also performs reasonably well and has some justification in other cases. For example, if projected study value is assumed to be proportional to power at a specific alternative and total cost is a linear function of sample size, then this approach is guaranteed either to produce more than 90% power or to be more cost efficient than any sample size that does. These methods are easy to implement, based on reliable inputs, and well justified, so they should be regarded as acceptable alternatives to current conventional approaches.
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              Current approaches to predicting molecular organic crystal structures

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                qn
                Química Nova
                Quím. Nova
                Sociedade Brasileira de Química (São Paulo, SP, Brazil )
                0100-4042
                1678-7064
                2012
                : 35
                : 5
                : 948-955
                Affiliations
                [03] Uberlândia MG orgnameUniversidade Federal de Uberlândia orgdiv1Instituto de Química Brasil
                [02] Viçosa MG orgnameUniversidade Federal de Viçosa orgdiv1Departamento de Química Brasil
                [05] Belo Horizonte MG orgnameUniversidade Federal de Minas Gerais orgdiv1Instituto de Ciências Exatas orgdiv2Departamento de Química Brasil
                [04] Viçosa MG orgnameUniversidade Federal de Viçosa orgdiv1Departamento de Fitopatologia Brasil
                [01] Campos dos Goytacazes RJ orgnameInstituto Federal Fluminense orgdiv1Departamento de Pesquisa e Pós-Graduação Brasil
                Article
                S0100-40422012000500016 S0100-4042(12)03500500016
                10.1590/S0100-40422012000500016
                ea74dd56-40ea-428f-af49-06cf6bae0cd4

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 35, Pages: 8
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                SciELO Brazil

                Self URI: Full text available only in PDF format (EN)

                absolute structural determination,avenaciolide analogues,antifungal activity

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