Universal Chemical Programming Language for Robotic Synthesis Reproducibility

The amount of chemical synthesis literature is growing quickly, but it still takes a long time to share and evaluate new processes because of cultural and practical barriers. Herein, we present an approach that uses a universal chemical programming language (χDL) to encode and execute synthesis p...

...now published as #NOpenAccess in Nature Synthesis:

Summary: doi.org/10.1038/s44160-023-00478-1
Article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s44160-023-00473-6

Universal chemical programming language for robotic synthesis repeatability - Nature Synthesis

The use of a universal chemical programming language (χDL) to encode and execute synthesis procedures for a variety of chemical reactions is reported, including reductive amination, ring formation, esterification, carbon–carbon bond formation and amide coupling. These procedures are validated and repeated in two international laboratories and on three independent robots.

Nature
@MWNautilus It's not OA, at least for me. The title seems bit misleading, as it's not about the programming language (e.g. no examples in the paper, but refs to papers describing it) but about its use. Would make more sense if "Using" was prepended to the title. Interesting work though.
@baoilleach Well, as I said: The Nature Synthesis publication indeed isn't OpenAccess but the preprint is.