The term sniplink is a portmanteau composed
from the words snippet and
hyperlink. A sniplink encapsulates a
small piece of information including one or more hyperlinks that
provide a reference for the given information and often suggest
interesting resources with further details.
Sniplinks served with the
Materials Matter! portal or uploaded by users
as a contribution consist of four essential parts:
material subject,
snippet,
link(s) and
contributor/author information.
The following example demonstrates the composition of a material sniplink:
{*Fe3O4}{ncmin=magnetite;spg=Fd-3m}
Investigation of the nano-crystalline magnetite cap
(Fe3O4, cubic space group
Fd3m) of the chiton
(marine mollusc Chaetopleura apiculata) tooth,
a classical model system for the study of matrix-mediated
mineralization [Lowenstam, H. A. \& Weiner, S.
On biomineralization (Oxford University Press, USA, 1989)]
10.1038/nature09686
Contribution by
Axeleratio
from CurlySMILES-annotated BIBTEX
Bibliography
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This sniplink informs about a study of magnetite (Fe3O4)
in a context where material science meets biology. The material is specified
via CurlySMILES notation, followed by the snippet, the document object identifier
(DOI), linking to the original article, and a contribution note. The next
sections describe the sniplink parts in more detail.
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