All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2004-2009 – Page 231
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Keeping it together
Capturing proteins by mass spectrometry as they go about their business in complexes may provide vital clues about how they work.
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Growing riches
Fertilisers are increasing productivity not only on the farm, but also at offshore oil reservoirs, Thor Haegh tells Cath O'Driscoll
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On delivery
Chemists are becoming ever more clever in their attempts to deliver new genes to particular cells, bringing the prospect of gene therapy a step closer. Maria Burke reports
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The impact of colloid science
Colloids are everywhere that we look, so why is it that most people know so little about them, asks Mike Garvey
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Woman of substance
Dame Kathleen Lonsdale, born 100 years ago this year, played a fundamental role in establishing the science of crystallography.
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OLEDs set to glow
Phenomenal growth rates for organic LEDs are leading to a baroque web of alliances as suppliers hedge their bets between different technologies.
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Fuel cells go mobile
Has the time come for fuel cells to deliver the technology they have long promised, asks Elizabeth Willcocks.
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A breath of. . .
Doctors may soon be able to check your health by analysing your breath. Nick Houtman reports
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Outsourcing - now's the time
As companies increasingly begin to turn outside for help to support their activities.
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Outsourcing - now's the time
As companies increasingly begin to turn outside for help to support their activities.
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A pint a day
Sterile, free of toxic metals, isotonic and good for the heart, beer is undeserving of decades of bad press.
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A pint a day. . .
Sterile, free of toxic metals, isotonic and good for the heart, beer is undeserving of decades of bad press.
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Clearer synthesis
Chemical companies are coming under increasing pressure to clean up their activities by finding alternative cleaner syntheses rather than by dealing with the after-effects.
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Clearer synthesis
Chemical companies are coming under increasing pressure to clean up their activities by finding alternative cleaner syntheses rather than by dealing with the after-effects.
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Cholesterol drug dilemma
A current topic of hot debate in the medical field is the efficacy of cholesterol-lowering drugs in prolonging life. Lalitha Gopinath looks at the drugs available, and the evidence put forward to demonstrate their effectiveness.
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Bouncing to a Nobel prize
Sir Harold Kroto has scored a chemistry Nobel prize for Britain for his pivotal role in discovering 'buckyballs', Richard Stevenson reports.
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Processing on a chip
According to Derek Craston and Simon Cowen, advances in microengineering are resulting in smaller, cheaper and faster instruments that promise to revolutionise the way we carry out analyses.
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BSE: the role of the 'infectious chemical'
Prions have been in the news constantly this year, thanks to the series of 'mad cow' scares.
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Designs on C60
Cath O'Driscoll takes a look at what's in store for the evolving field of fullerene chemistry, and talks to one of its founders, Sir Harold Kroto.