Chemistry
> Getting Started > Finding
Articles
FINDING ARTICLES
When people come into the library to look for a journal
article, they are usually starting in one of two ways: they either
already have a reference to a particula article (or at least a partial
reference), or they have a topic or author and they're looking for
material on that topic or by that author. And always...remember that
if you run into a problem, ASK! for help.
These are usually (although not always) the easiest
searches, since (theoretically) you've already got all the information
except the acutal location of the article.
The trick is that it helps to know what kind of publication
that the article is in. The following table gives you a quick guide
to some common publication types. (If your citation has an abbreviated
journal title, you'll need to first get the full title from on the
the abbrevation sources.)
| Common reference
types |
Category of reference |
To find location
check |
| Ferch, H. Plastics, Paint Rubber
1996, 10, 85-86 |
Journal articles |
Journals List page |
| Beall, H.; Trimbur, J.,
A Short Guide to Writing about Chemistry, 2nd
ed.; Longman: New York, 2001; pp 17-32. |
Books |
The
CAT. "Browse" search by tiele or authors (A short
Guide...or Beall, H.) |
| Reid, C.J.; Ballantine, J.A. In Analytical
Applications of Spectroscopy II, Proceedings of the 2nd
International Conference of Spectroscopy across the Spectum, Hatfield,
UK, 1990; Davies, A.M.C.; Creaser, C.S., Eds.; Royal Society of
Chemistry: Cambridge, UK, 1991. |
Conference proceeding papers |
The
CAT. "Browse" search by title (Analytical Applications
of Spectroscopy II) |
| King, K.J. Development of a Pressurized
System for Oxidation Studies of Volatile Fluides. M.S. Thesis,
Pennsylvania State University, State College, PA, March 1983. |
Master's thesis and doctoral dissertations |
The
CAT, if Penn State. "Browse" search by title or
author (Development of a Pressurized...or King, K.J.) |
These types of searches involve the use of
indexes. Indexes are publications that provide access to the intellectual
content of other publications, such as journals, patents, conference
proceeedings, etc. Two very important ones for chemists are: Chemical
Abstracts and Science Citation Index. You'll probably be more familiar
with them by the names of their electronic counterparts: SciFinder
Scholar and Web of Science.
is actually
a combination of five different databases:
- Chemical Abstracts (indexes journal articles, conference
proceedings, patents, and chemical dissertations back to 1907),
-
Medline (online version of Index Medicus. Covers
the medical literature back to 1966),
-
Chemical Abstracts Registry File (indexes the chemicals
described in Chemical Abstracts and provides CAS Registry Numbers
for them. It is also searchable by chemical structure),
-
CAS Reacts (a chemical reactions database),
- ChemCATS (links to chemical catalogs).
Chemical Abstracts Service has prepared a series of
online tutorials to help you learn how to use the different features
included in SciFinder Scholar, so I'll just refer you to that
website for that information.
is a combination
of three databases:
- Science Citation Index
- Social Science Citation Index
- Arts and Humanities Citation Index
ISI, the publisher of Web of Science, has prepared
a tutorial
to introduce you to the features of the database.
Once you have found the references that you want, you
can then just follow the information above regarding Know Item Searching
to get to the articles that you want.
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