Wikipedia:WikiProject Chemicals/Organization

This worklist for the Chemicals WikiProject gives structure and organization to all the work going on. The progress statistics from this worklist are published monthly on the project discussion page.

Procedure
The list is aligned with the goals of the WikiProject. Additions and deletions to this list are not currently invited but remain possible. Feel free to post your proposals for such on the discussion page.

All articles are assessed continuously. If you have improved an article, you may adjust the entry in this worklist yourself (all changes are monitored), or you may simply put a remark that improvements have been done (either in the worklist or on the talk page), and leave the re-assessment to WP:Chem core team members. Promotions to A-Class have an explicit peer-review recommendation page; promotion to Feature article follow the normal procedure.

Polymers
Typically, these polymers do not have a table of properties. Instead of the usual chemical properties, a table of material properties for each of the polymers might be more suitable, although such properties may vary too much depending on molecular weight, branching, tacticity and monomer orientation (head-to-tail, etc.), cross-linking, and any co-monomers present (even in small amounts). At this point, these tables are considered to be low priority.
 * Note: it was discussedhere to transfer this section to WikiProject Polymers. The outcome was that the list be used as a goal of both projects, and the statistics included with the WP:Chem statistics.

Out of scope compounds
The following compounds have been discussed while deciding on the in-scope articles in this worklist. For reference purposes, they are listed here, but they are not in scope of the Chemicals wikiproject, and will not contribute to the achievement of the goals. Therefore, these articles will not follow the assessment scheme. In case you want to add or exchange a compound in the above worklist, be freely invited to propose such a change on the talk page.

Suggested inorganic chemicals
 * 1) Aluminium: Aluminium bromide
 * 2) Arsenic: Arsenic acid, see also Arsenic(III) oxide
 * 3) Bismuth:Bismuth trichloride, Table available
 * 4) Boron: Boron nitride, Boron trichloride
 * 5) Bromine: Potassium bromide, Hydrogen bromide
 * 6) Carbon: Silicon carbide, Carbonic acid, Sodium cyanide
 * 7) Gallium: Gallium(III) chloride, Table available
 * 8) Hafnium: Hafnium carbide
 * 9) Iron: Iron(II) sulfate, Ferrocene
 * 10) Molybdenum: Molybdenum hexacarbonyl
 * 11) Nickel: Nickel sulfate
 * 12) Nitrogen: Ammonium chloride, Sodium nitrate, Nitrous oxide, Nitric oxide
 * 13) Palladium: Palladium(II) cyanide
 * 14) Platinum: Chloroplatinic acid
 * 15) Rhenium: Ammonium perrhenate
 * 16) Rubidium: Rubidium chloride
 * 17) Uranium: Uranium(III) chloride
 * 18) Zirconium: Zirconium(IV) chloride, Table available

Suggested reagents and other compounds
 * 1) Triazine, see 1,3,5-Triazine
 * 2) Dioxane
 * 3) Thiophenols, or better Thiophenol
 * 4) Toluidines, or better para-Toluidine
 * 5) Tetramethylammonium hydroxide

Suggested polymers
 * 1) Butyl rubber - polyisobutylene + 2-7% isoprene. I plan to include a discussion of butyl rubber and nitrile rubber in Synthetic rubber. A separate, rather stubby article on Butyl rubber has appeared.
 * 2) other halopolymers such as PCTFE, PVDC (Saran), PVDF, Tefzel, etc.
 * 3) polysulfones  ????
 * 4) polyalphaolefins  ???? - A stubby article on Polyolefins has appeared.  I edited it to mention polyalphaolefins.
 * 5) polyethers such as polyethylene oxide (PEO) and polypropylene oxide (PPO) Polyethylene glycol, the oligomer of PEO mentions PEO as well