All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2004-2009 – Page 222
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News
Copycat chemistry disarms bugs
Researchers develop protein copies which make bacteria impotent.
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News
Picking the bones of drug delivery
Supercritical CO2 offers a novel route to controlled protein release.
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Feature
Blind faith
People can lose their eyesight for a number of different reasons but there are a few promising treatments on the horizon. Michael Gross looks them up.
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News
Getting personal with biotechnology
Personalised medicine, which promises to prevent, detect and cure diseases by linking the mechanisms and pathways of illnesses to individuals, will become a reality 'in our lifetime'.
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News
Physical chemistry helps biology
A new biolabel to help biologists monitor dynamic processes in biological systems is being developed by a team at Utrecht University in The Netherlands.
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Review
Small is beautiful
Lab on a chip: miniaturized systems for (bio)chemical analysis and synthesis
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News
Double beam dream
Researchers at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Oxfordshire, UK, are developing what they claim to be the 'most intense laser in the world'.
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News
Back to batteries
Chemists are turning their hand to solving the world's electrical energy crisis.
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News
Vernalis buys back migraine drug
Vernalis, the biotech company formed from the merger of British Biotech and the original Vernalis, has bought back the rights to its migraine drug from Irish biotech firm Elan.
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Opinion
Back to the Bachelor?
Terry Mitchell looks at the problems of implementing the Bologna process.
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News
Propelling self assembly
A new cage molecule with a unique 'double-propellor' structure and interesting magnetic properties has been prepared in a collaboration between universities.
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News
Nanotube bolognaise, anyone?
Reinforcing polymers with carbon nanotubes; it's all on the surface.
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News
A fishy method of analysis
Artificial musks are causing scientists to look to new ways of detecting pollutants.
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News
Technological advance from Nature's design
Letting Nature do the hard work in preparing complex structures for microdevices is looking more likely thanks to a team of materials scientists from Ohio State University and the Georgia Institute of Technology, US.
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Opinion
Letters: May 2004
From David Tilbrook The Knovel service the RSC has provided is exceptional! Congratulations. At last [RSC] membership is delivering something of real practical benefit to the practising chemists in the country. I would make one comment though. You aren’t advertising this service very much and it is a real membership ...