All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2004-2009 – Page 150
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News
Scandal ousts Iupac president-elect
Japanese research cash on hold after financial investigation
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News
Bury radioactive waste, UK government told
Underground repository proposed as long-term home for spent fuel rods
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News
Radioactive scorpion venom stings brain tumours
Promising clinical trail for poison-derived cancer treatment
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News
Industrial solvent in cancer probe
Trichloroethylene risks should be reassessed, says US National Research Council
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News
Fuel cell future in miniature
The latest techie toy for educating unsuspecting children has arrived.
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Review
Elementary crime solving
The science of Sherlock Holmes: from Baskerville Hall to the Valley of Fear, the real forensics behind the great detective's greatest cases
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Feature
Joined-up testing
Europe's Joint Research Centre has played a significant role in developing Reach legislation and is at the forefront of the drive to develop alternatives to animal testing.
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Feature
Ions in the open air
Ionisation techniques that remove the need for sample preparation are taking mass spectrometry into new and exciting research areas, reports Steve Down
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Feature
Catalysts of creation
In the quest to understand the origins of life on Earth, scientists are finding fresh evidence that bundles of RNA called ribozymes were the first truly biological molecules.
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Opinion
Letters: August 2006
From Norman Nicolson The excellent article on serendipity missed one important event (Chemistry World, June 2006, p32). A chemist working for ICI wondered what used could be made of the blue sludge that had to be cleaned out of the bottom of the phthalimide reactor. This was made of ...