All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2004-2009 – Page 108
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News
Sweet approach to tackling cancer
Synthetic cancer vaccine targets sugar molecules on the surface of tumour cells
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Podcast
September 2007
Chemistry World Podcast - September 2007 Music (Promo) Brought to you by the Royal Society of Chemistry. This is the Chemistry World Podcast. (Promo ends) Interviewer - Chris Smith Hello! Welcome to the September edition of the Chemistry World podcast with Mark Peplow and James Mitchell Crow. ...
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News
Gene dreams troubled by market realities
Chinese gene therapy trials show five years of success against cancer
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News
UK research outpost open in Beijing
The first overseas office of the Research Councils of the United Kingdom (RCUK) opens in October
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News
Oil firms head overseas
China's rapidly increasing thirst for oil has pushed prospectors into areas shunned by Western firms
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News
Coal chemical projects flourish
Business booms as international oil prices hit almost US$80 per barrel
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News
Gut's taste for the sweet life revealed
Sugar sensor may explain why guzzling diet cola may not be the best way to lose weight
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News
Toxins' synthesis secret cracked
Pure water solves a 22 year old mystery surrounding the infamous 'ladder' toxins produced by 'red tide' algal blooms
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News
India announces plans for its first nanopark
Already a software and biotech hub, Bangalore now hopes to be a world-class nanotechnology centre
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News
Spontaneous superlattices
Zinc oxide nanocrystals that self-assemble into 'superlattices' are promising luminescent materials, say scientists in China.
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News
'Lost' folate enzyme found after 30 years
Researchers stumble upon biochemical machinery that helps bacteria make essential B vitamin
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News
China invests over $1bn in drug safety
In a bid to improve its food and drug safety, China has announced it will invest 8.8 billion yuan (US$1.16 billion)
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Feature
Taking a medical trip
Psychedelic drugs show promise in treating conditions including post-traumatic stress disorder and Alzheimer's. Karen Harries-Rees uncovers the come-back of medicinal hallucinogens
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Feature
A 60-year service
When a group of MIT professors started to design products in a garage in the 1930s, they had no idea that they were laying the foundations for a global business.
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Feature
At the business end
Sir Richard Sykes has turned Imperial College, London, into a brand with an international influence. Richard Van Noorden meets him