With Google Trends, you can compare the world’s interest in your favorite topics. Enter up to five topics and see how often they’ve been searched on Google over time. Google Trends also shows how frequently your topics have appeared in Google News stories, and in which geographic regions people have searched for them most.
I tried experimenting by searching different chemicals in Google Trends.
For example, searching for Acetic Acid, retrieved a news story about projected forecast for the world market of Acetic Acid by the year 2015.
World Market for Acetic Acid Projected to Reach 11.8 Million Tons in 2015, According to New Report by Global Industry Analysts, Inc.
See More News about Acetic Acid.
Some other examples:
Methanol
Ethylene Oxide
See More News about Ethylene Oxide.
Try this:
Find out which countries have people have searched for ‘Phenol’ the most?
The Chemical Database database will allow the user to retreive information for any of 25,496 hazardous chemicals or ‘generic’ entries based on a keyword search. Potential keywords include names, formula and registry numbers (CAS, DOT, RTECS, EINECS, Beilstein and Merck). Formula are represented in Hill format for searching and a more descriptive format for viewing.
Access: The Chemical Database
See: Phenol
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced the launch of a Web site, DOepatents, which allows search and retrieval of information from a collection of more than 20,000 patent records. The database represents a growing collection of patents resulting from R&D supported by DOE. DOEpatents consists of bibliographic records, with full text where available via either a PDF file or an HTML link to the record at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
Read the full story in Information Today at:
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced the launch DOEpatents
Access DoE Patent Information at: DOepatents
The Energy Citations Database (ECD) provides free access to over two million science research citations from 1948 through the present, with continued growth through regular updates. There are over 140,000 electronic documents, primarily from 1994 forward, available via the database. Citations and documents are made publicly available by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). ECD includes scientific and technical research results in disciplines of interest to DOE such as chemistry, physics, materials, environmental science, geology, engineering, mathematics, climatology, oceanography, computer science and related disciplines. It includes bibliographic citations to report literature, conference papers, journal articles, books, dissertations, and patents. ECD was created and developed by DOE’s Office of Scientific and Technical Information.
Search the Energy Citation Database:
Basic Search
Fielded Search (Adavanced Search)