All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2004-2009 – Page 119
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News
Optimism greets China's quest for clean coal
Chinese scientists are on the verge of successfully producing clean fuels from underground coal deposits
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FeatureThere's more to quitting than nicotine
As England joins the growing list of nations to ban smoking in enclosed public places, Lisa Melton explores the medicinal arsenal that could help to kick the habit
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News
Antarctic atmosphere could give Gaia hypothesis a boost
Unexpectedly high and persistent levels of halogen oxides found in the Antarctic atmosphere
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News
Striped nanorods feel the strain
Silver-sulfide quantum dots have been lined up in a cadmium-sulfide rod using strain forces
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News
Polonium clean-up leaves trail of destruction
Decontamination of polonium traces from Litvinenko case presented a mammoth task
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News
Goat antidote
Gram quantities of a potent chemical-weapon antidote have been produced in goats' milk
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News
Lift-off for fingerprint analysis
New non-destructive technique for chemically analysing fingerprints collected from crime scenes
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News
Newly identified side to global warming
An atmospheric mechanism has emerged that could lift global temperatures even higher than current predictions
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Opinion
Editorial: Research regions
The European Research Area - a rather hypothetical region at the best of times - is failing to live up to its potential
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Business
Business roundup: September 2007
ICI sale finally agreed ICI have accepted a takeover offer of £8 billion from chemical conglomerate Akzo Nobel. This 670p per share agreement is Akzo’s third approach for ICI in as many months, following an initial offer of 600p per share in June, and then 650p per share in ...
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Careers
Volunteering to inspiring
Adele Patterson is devoted to helping new chemists build their own careers but nothing will keep her out of the lab. Yfke Hager meets her
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Opinion
Credit where it's due
Process chemists just don't get the credit they deserve, says Derek Lowe
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News
Chinese legislation to increase drug safety
Long-awaited amendment to China's drug registration system is expected to discipline the country's medical sector and boost the pharmaceutical industry
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Opinion
Letters: August 2007
From John Holman Your editorial ’Dear Gordon’ (Chemistry World, June 2007) points to the skills that chemistry graduates can contribute to the economy. Chemistry is a quantitative subject that teaches the scientific use of evidence, and that is one reason why chemistry graduates are so employable. However, Peter Cotgreave’s ...