Skip to Main Content

Chemistry Research Guide

Contact Your Librarian

Profile Photo
Ellen Cline
she/her/hers
Contact:
Belk Library 117
3362786586

Citation Resources

blue image with four beakers on the left side filled with purple liquid

Guide to Chemistry Research

This guide contains links to chemistry resources, online and some print, that are available through Belk Library.

blurry image of a street with a magnifying glass bringing the word "Find" and buildings into focus

Finding Sources

colorful image of library shelves with the word "journals" in the middleAlso known as "Scholarly Articles," "Peer-Reviewed Articles," or "Academic Articles," these are:

  • written and reviewed by scholars and provide new research, analysis, or information about a specific topic
  • usually focused on a narrow subject or a single case study
  • intended for an academic audience

Know your types of articles:

  • "peer-reviewed" means the article is approved by other experts before publication or presentation
  • a "review" article summarizes the field's current understanding of a topic (great for background information!)
  • a "preprint" is an early version of an article, usually prior to peer review
Pros Cons
  • information is based on research and expertise
  • information is detailed and focused on a narrow topic
  • the peer-review process (mostly) insures that the information is accurate
  • each article adds to a growing understanding of a topic by contributing new ideas
  • information is detailed and focused on a narrow topic
  • often filled with field-specific jargon

Find Chemistry Articles:

colorful image of open books with the word "Books" in the middleBooks written by experts are a good source of information for many topics. Books in the sciences and engineering often contain:

  • exercises and examples
  • problem sets
  • other practical tools

Use these tools to help learn as you read.

Remember: you may only need to read one chapter of a scholarly book!

 

Pros Cons
  • easier to read than journal articles, and (usually) written for a wider audience
  • often undergo a peer-review process
  • contain less recent information, due to the long publication process
  • can be lengthy

Find Chemistry Books:

​​​​​​​  

Datasets are collections of data, numeric or textual, arranged in tables. Data and datasets are often used in chemistry work, whether you need:

  • detailed data on material properties
  • experimental data for a report
  • something else entirely; data can be almost anything

Handbooks, like the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, often contain large amounts of data, as well as definitions, techniques, references, and much more.

Pros Cons
  • exact and specific
  • can contain incredible detail or level of granularity not found elsewhere
  • sometimes difficult to locate the exact type of data needed
  • can be messy or contain bias
  • might be restricted access

Find & Use Handbooks or Data: