Look at the website or portal where the file was downloaded. Most academic or technical repositories provide a README or a description page for their archives.
The "Am-Che" prefix could refer to "Applied Chemistry" or a specific internal project (e.g., related to the Anna University M.Sc. Applied Chemistry program or similar institutions). Am-Che-010.7z
It may be a bundle for a specific course, such as Chemistry 010 at UC Davis , containing lecture notes, lab manuals, or problem sets. Look at the website or portal where the file was downloaded
Could you clarify or what specific field of chemistry (e.g., organic, computational, lab management) you are working in? American Chemical Society Applied Chemistry program or similar institutions)
In technical communities, such naming often refers to specific versions of chemistry tools like CHEMCAD or Ansys Chemkin , possibly including custom plugins or configuration files.
Use a tool like 7-Zip or WinRAR to "Open Archive" without extracting. Look for files like features.txt , info.pdf , or specific executable names (e.g., .exe , .py , .m ) to identify the software's purpose.
If you have access to the file, you can determine its features by: