The largest electronic
collections of analytical data represent 1% or less of the known
chemical structures. It is estimated that as many spectra are
recorded in industrial and academic laboratories in a single
day as are contained in the largest electronic analytical databases.
Nearly all of these spectra are discarded or are unavailable,
even to those who acquired them. The up-to-date numbers of chemical
substance registrations has now passed 35 million.
Increasingly worrying
gaps have become apparent in the coverage of known chemistry
by reference spectroscopic databases. Access to large electronically
stored collections of spectroscopic and substance data stimulates
significant progress in chemical research and in automated methods
for structure/spectrum and structure/biological-activity correlation.
This has wide implications for human health, new materials,
environmental protection, sustainable development and educational
progress.
The EuroSpec project
will establish the infrastructure necessary to make high quality
reference spectroscopic database with links to available associated
chemical knowledge. The network will coordinate electronic data
submission from peer-reviewed scientific literature and make
the data initially available to the publication reviewers and
subsequently to the wider scientific community.