Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Multi-fusion similarity

The combination of fusion rules (e.g., maximum and mean-fusion) gave rise to the multi-fusion similarity (MFS) maps that were developed for the visual characterization and comparison of compound databases [139]. This approach has been employed to explore SARs of compound datasets [140] and to compare combinatorial libraries [141]. Consensus approaches are also applied in diversity analysis of compound collections complementary 2D and 3D representations are used to obtain a comprehensive characterization of the diversity of large compound databases [60, 142]. [Pg.373]

It can be viewed as a work-related term that increases the internal energy of the system, unless diffusion opposes the external force. This contribution vanishes for pure fluids (i.e., ji = 0). It also vanishes for multi-component mixtures when the external force field acts similarly on all components in the mixture (i.e., g, = g for 1 < f < A ) because the dif-fusional mass fluxes of all components with respect to the mass-average velocity sum to zero ... [Pg.731]


See other pages where Multi-fusion similarity is mentioned: [Pg.319]    [Pg.389]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.328]    [Pg.389]    [Pg.149]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.458]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.373 ]




SEARCH



© 2024 chempedia.info