| Literature DB >> 22477773 |
Saulius Gražulis, Daniel Chateigner, Robert T Downs, A F T Yokochi, Miguel Quirós, Luca Lutterotti, Elena Manakova, Justas Butkus, Peter Moeck, Armel Le Bail.
Abstract
The Crystallography Open Database (COD), which is a project that aims to gather all available inorganic, metal-organic and small organic molecule structural data in one database, is described. The database adopts an open-access model. The COD currently contains ∼80 000 entries in crystallographic information file format, with nearly full coverage of the International Union of Crystallography publications, and is growing in size and quality.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 22477773 PMCID: PMC3253730 DOI: 10.1107/S0021889809016690
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Crystallogr ISSN: 0021-8898 Impact factor: 3.304
Figure 1The COD deposition procedure. In this data flow diagram, circles indicate automatic processes and arrows show the data paths. As in control flow diagrams, a trapezoid indicates manual processes and a rhomb indicates a process where a decision to divert data via different paths is taken. Names after the colons in each node are the names of the Unix tools or COD-specific programs that were used for that operation. Rectangles are abstract (web) data sources – data sources depicted in pink provide crystallographic and chemical information (coordinates, symmetry data, formulae), while those depicted on a blue background provide bibliographic data. Cylinders denote internal COD disk storage facilities (databases). File extensions indicate file formats used. The .mrk file format is an intermediate format similar to XML designed for ease of parsing and editing, and used only internally by the COD deposition scripts.