All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2004-2009 – Page 121
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News
Eastern blot on the landscape
Molecular biologists have a Southern blot, a northern blot and a western blot, but is there space on the compass for an eastern?
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News
The many faces of platinum
Novel electrochemical synthesis produces multi-faceted, catalytically efficient platinum nanocrystals
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News
Particle physics gets smaller
The University of Manchester, UK, is leading a project to build a more compact particle accelerator
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News
Ionic liquids' Etch a Sketch surprise
Write, erase, and write again - on the surfaces of frozen organic salts
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News
Chemists arrive at the island of stability
Despite predictions of exotic properties, 'superheavy' element 112 behaves like one of the family
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News
Protein printboard
'Molecular printboard' technique builds protein biochips with unprecedented control over binding specificity, strength, and orientation
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News
Pocket-sized PCR machine
A device for amplifying DNA that runs on two-AA batteries and costs about £5 to make.
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News
Pocket-sized PCR machine
A device for amplifying DNA that runs on two-AA batteries and costs about £5 to make.
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News
China government appoints new science chief
Wan Gang is first non-communist minister for 35 years
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News
Photosynthesis works by 'quantum computing'
The energy cascade within green sulfur bacteria reveals a quantum surprise
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News
Radical reactions for organocatalysis
A little oxidation helps aldehydes switch their character
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Podcast
May 2007
Chemistry World Podcast - May 2007(Promo)Brought to you by the Royal Society of Chemistry: The Chemistry World Podcast.(End Promo)Interviewer - Azi KhatiriHello and Welcome to the eighth episode of the Chemistry World podcast with me Azi Khatiri sitting in for Chris Smith while he is enjoying the sunshine down under. ...
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News
New superabsorbents to clean up future oil spills
Lipophilic polyelectrolyte gel swells to hundreds of times its weight by soaking up nonpolar organic solvents
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News
Amyloid protein seen to zip together
Proteins found to zip together amyloid fibrils could provide a new therapeutic target for neurodegenerative diseases
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News
Deadly beetles intercept bee's warnings
Parasitic beetles invade the hives of honeybees in America with the help of the bees' own alarm pheromone
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News
Look, no wires!
Wireless power-transmission sheets use printed organic transistors and plastic microelectromechanical system switches
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News
Scientists clash on methane mystery
Controversy around plants' greenhouse gas emissions compared to cold fusion furore
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News
New HIV blocker prepares for market
Full-speed ahead for clinical trials of recently discovered drug hopeful
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Feature
Molecular trees bear fruit
Polymers that grow like trees have been around for nearly three decades. Now they are on the verge of realising their potential, as Michael Gross reports
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Feature
Battery assault
As our everyday gadgets become more advanced, the battery technology used to power them lags further behind. But help is at hand, as Simon Hadlington discovers