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Grimm's Hydride Displacement Law is an early hypothesis to describe bioisosterism, the ability of certain chemical groups to function as or mimic other chemical groups. :“Atoms anywhere up to four places in the periodic system before an inert gas change their properties by uniting with one to four hydrogen atoms, in such a manner that the resulting combinations behave like pseudoatoms, which are similar to elements in the groups one to four places respectively, to their right.” According to Grimm, each vertical column (of Table below) would represent a group of isosteres. ==References== 〔 # Grimm, H. G. ''Structure and Size of the Non-metallic Hydrides'' ''Z. Electrochem.'' 1925, ''31'', 474-480. # Grimm, H. G. ''On the Systematic Arrangement of Chemical Compounds from the Perspective of Research on Atomic Composition; and on Some Challenges in Experimental Chemistry.'' ''Naturwissenschaften'' 1929, ''17'', 557-564. # Patani, G. A.; LaVoie, E. J. ''Bioisosterism: A Rational Approach in Drug Design.'' ''Chem. Rev.'' 1996, ''96'', 3147-3176. ( PMID 11848856) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Grimm's hydride displacement law」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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