All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2004-2009 – Page 25

  • News

    Antimicrobial nanoparticles may help fight brain infections

    2009-06-28T18:00:00Z

    Therapeutic peptides that can cross the blood-brain barrier have been designed

  • Opinion

    Comment

    2009-06-26T18:30:26Z

    Adam Afriyie, UK shadow science minister, would like to see more investment in training the next generation of scientists and is pioneering a science literacy scheme for MPs

  • Opinion

    Polyhedra of the past

    2009-06-26T18:28:00Z

    Today polyhedra speak to chemists of fullerenes and other cage molecules. But they once had a very different meaning, says Philip Ball

  • Opinion

    Column: Totally Synthetic

    2009-06-26T18:27:56Z

    Cochleamycin A

  • Opinion

    Formulation chemist friction

    2009-06-26T18:26:00Z

    Derek Lowe wonders where we'd be without the formulation chemists

  • News

    In the papers

    2009-06-26T18:18:51Z

    Short items

  • News

    Note book

    2009-06-26T17:56:15Z

    Short items, July 2009

  • News

    News in Brief

    2009-06-26T17:41:44Z

    Short items, July 2009

  • News

    STFC cuts funds to key facilities

    2009-06-26T17:10:00Z

    ISIS cut to just 120 days of operation per year as budget cuts bite

  • Opinion

    Editorial: Event season

    2009-06-26T16:18:00Z

    Chemistry World staff hard at work attending and reporting on as many events and conferences as humanly possible

  • Business

    Business roundup: July 2009

    2009-06-26T16:03:00Z

    Dow Corning unleashes innovation US silicone-materials maker Dow Corning is transforming its business strategy to focus on innovations in sustainability, efficiency and alternative energy. Even though the company has managed to stay profitable during the current economic downturn, which has seen many of its competitors struggle, Dow Corning has decided ...

  • Feature

    Hoisting the solar sail

    2009-06-26T16:00:00Z

    Flying through space by catching sunlight on ultra-thin sails could revolutionise space travel - and the idea could soon take off, says Ned Stafford

  • Feature

    Armageddon in slow motion

    2009-06-26T15:49:43Z

    Nobel peace prize winner and doctor Eric Chivian believes environmental change poses a serious threat to human health. Maria Burke talks to him

  • Feature

    Spin-outs: protecting your assets

    2009-06-26T15:47:36Z

    Patents are crucial for any spin-out to thrive, say patent attornies Bob Pidgeon and Jennifer Delaney

  • Feature

    Spin-outs: business built on chemistry

    2009-06-26T15:30:25Z

    Graham Richards, former head of chemistry at the University of Oxford, shares some of the lessons learned from spinning out companies based on good novel chemistry

  • Feature

    Temozolomide - birth of a blockbuster

    2009-06-26T15:27:00Z

    The history of anticancer drug temozolomide can be traced back over 30 years - and it all started with some novel nitrogen chemistry, says Clare Sansom

  • Opinion

    Flashback

    2009-06-26T15:26:07Z

    30 years ago in Chemistry in Britain

  • Opinion

    The age of chemistry

    2009-06-26T15:26:00Z

    Perkin would contemplate no other future but to study chemistry

  • Review

    Academic Inspiration

    2009-06-26T15:09:28Z

    The highs and lows of creating a business from university research

  • Review

    Digging for Chemistry

    2009-06-26T15:09:24Z

    Chemical information mining: facilitating literature-based discovery