creative visualisation in chemistry

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Creative Visualization in Chemistry Prof. Jonathan P. Bowen Birmingham City University & Museophile Limited United Kingdom www.jpbowen.com

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Talk by Professor Jonathan Bowen at the PRATT and King's College London Symposium "Can Scholarship show as well as Tell?"

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Page 1: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Creative Visualization

in Chemistry

Prof. Jonathan P. Bowen Birmingham City University

& Museophile Limited United Kingdom

www.jpbowen.com

Page 2: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Introduction

• Prof. Jonathan Bowen

• Mathematics, art, engineering,

computer science, software

engineering, museum informatics

• Career: Oxford, Reading, LSBU, BCU

• Visitor: King’s College London, Brunel,

Westminster, Waikato (New Zealand)

• Pratt Institute (2012 – Museum Informatics)

• Electronic Visualisation and the Arts (EVA London conference, 8–10 July 2014)

Page 3: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Patterns

“The way is long if one

follows precepts, but

short ... if one follows

patterns.”

– Seneca (c.4 BC – AD 65)

Prof. Roger Penrose and

“Penrose tiles” at the new

Mathematical Institute,

Oxford University

Page 4: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

The Sceptical Chymist

“It is my intent to beget a good

understanding between the chymists and

the mechanical philosophers who have

hitherto been too little acquainted with one

another's learning.”

– Robert Boyle (1627–1691)

Plaque to Robert Boyle and

Robert Hooke, University

College, High Street, Oxford

Page 5: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Why chemistry?

• E. J. Bowen FRS (1898–1980)

– Physical chemist, Oxford

• H. J. M. Bowen (1929–2001)

– Analytical chemist

• [J. P. Bowen (b. 1956)]

• A. M. Bowen (b. 1986)

– Biophysical chemist

– Doctorate in Chemistry, Oxford (2013)

Photograph in

the National

Portrait

Gallery,

London

Page 6: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Structure of chlorophyll a

Bowen, E.J.

(1946) The

Chemical

Aspects of

Light, 2nd

ed., Oxford

University

Press. (1st

ed. 1942.)

Page 7: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Structure of chlorophyll a

Bowen, H.J.M.

(1966) Trace

Elements in

Biochemistry,

Academic

Press.

Page 8: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Modern visualizations of

chlorophyll a Wikipedia (2014).

Page 9: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Modern visualizations of

chlorophyll a Chlorophyll a

ligands in green

within the

crystal structure

of spinach

major light

harvesting

complex

(pdb code: 1rwt)

Page 10: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

DPhil thesis (2013)

• NMR (Nuclear Magnetic Resonance)

• DEER (Double Electron-Electron Resonance)

• REINDEER (Repeated Excitations IN DEER)

Page 11: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Visualization of molecules

using UCSF Chimera (Wikimedia

Commons)

Page 12: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

EVA London paper

• Karl Harrison

– IT support in Department of Chemistry, Oxford

– Artwork on covers of chemistry journals

• Electronic Visualisation and the Arts (EVA)

London conference: www.eva-london.org

• 2013 paper on “Electronic Visualisation in

Chemistry: From Alchemy to Art”

(Harrison and Bowen × 2).

ewic.bcs.org/content/ConWebDoc/51042

Page 13: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Computer science journal

covers and images

(Google

Images)

Page 14: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Chemistry journal covers

and images

(Google

Images)

Page 15: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Typeset chemical structures

and interactions

Wells (1956)

Grundon (1962)

Goodwin (1964)

Page 16: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Painting of Lysozyme Philips (1966)

Page 17: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Soap bubbles

(right) &

organic alkane

chains (below)

Dickerson & Geis

(1976)

Page 18: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Illustration tools

Drawings of

sucrose, C60 & Taxol

Pre-computerization

Page 19: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Models of chemical structures

Metal and plastic

Page 20: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Most famous

3D model? Watson and Crick

1953 model of DNA

– visualization of

double helix

University of Cambridge

Museums, reproduction

on view in Two Temple

Place, London, 2014

Page 21: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

3D renders of inorganic structures

Computer-generated

Page 22: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

3D renders of inorganic structures

Computer-generated

Page 23: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

3D renders of organic structures

Computer-generated

Page 24: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Atom and bond size control

1. Wire frame stick model

2. Ball and stick model

3. Scaled ball and stick model

4. Space-filling model

(aka a calotte model)

Page 25: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Periodic table and element colours

Oxygen = red, Hydrogen = white,

Nitrogen = blue, Carbon = black, ...

Page 26: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Inorganic secondary structure,

seen in polyhedral view

1. Wire frame

2. Ball and stick view

3. Atom packing view

4. Polyhedral view

(repeating network)

Page 27: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Inorganic polyhedral illustrations

Beauty of structures

Page 28: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Views of DNA

Double helix

Page 29: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Protein and enzyme secondary structures

Amino acid sequences: sheets and helices

Page 30: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Journal covers with chemistry art

Journal and textbook illustrations

Page 31: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

3D render lightning effects on a simple

organic molecule

Starting point

6

Page 32: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

3D render lightning effects on a protein

More complexity

6

Page 33: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

3D renders of chemical structures

Produced by visualization experts,

not original researchers

Page 34: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Initial concept sketch

“Back of an envelope” – by researcher

Page 35: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Components for cover art

Three separate components

Page 36: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Design artwork

Initial draft and final cover artwork

Page 37: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Chemistry

and art

Glass blowing

for chemical

apparatus

Glass sculpture of

discus thrower by

E. J. Bowen

Page 38: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

Research

“If we knew what it was we were

doing, it would not be called

research, would it?”

– Albert Einstein (1879–1955)

Bust in

Birmingham

Museum and

Art Gallery

Blackboard in

the Museum of

the History of

Science, Oxford

(16 May 1931)

Page 39: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

EVA London conference

• Electronic Visualisation and the Arts (EVA)

London conference: www.eva-london.org

• 2013 paper on “Electronic Visualisation in

Chemistry: From Alchemy to Art”

(Harrison and Bowen × 2).

ewic.bcs.org/content/ConWebDoc/51042

• Next conference: British Computer Society

offices, Southampton Street, Covent Garden,

central London, 8–10 July 2014

• 2014 paper with Tula Giannini on

“Digitalism: The New Realism”

Page 40: Creative Visualisation in Chemistry

The end!

Prof. Jonathan Bowen (FBCS, FRSA)

[email protected]

www.jpbowen.com