All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2004-2009 – Page 85
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News
Tight US budget hits chemistry research
NSF cuts university grants, NIST halts chemical lab programme
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News
Planets' birthplace harbours chemical seeds of life
Organic molecules observed in the planet-forming region of a star resembling our own Sun
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News
Germany set to resolve foreign doctorates spat
Scientists with US PhDs no longer to face criminal charges for using the title 'Dr'
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News
Small firms benefit from Darling's first budget
UK Chancellor announces money for SMEs and school science but abolishes biofuel subsidy
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News
Chemical wheel could boost computers
Researchers in Japan have created a molecular assembly that could allow 16 bit parallel processing
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News
Report outlines low carbon future for China and EU
Combining efforts on climate change could open huge market opportunities
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News
New hope for anti-HIV gels
Promising results for microbicide tenofovir after a string of failures
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News
Cell's protein factory seen in action
Optical tweezers help scientists watch a ribosome move along a strand of RNA making protein
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News
UK drug pricing system scrapped
Pharmaceutical price regulation scheme will be replaced by more stringent controls
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News
Ditching fossil fuels could stretch water resources
Electric vehicles are too thirsty, warn US scientists
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News
Sea cucumbers inspire switchable material
Composite can flip between rigid and flexible states - just like the skin of the sea-bed scavenger
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News
Synthetic enzymes designed by computer
New, artificial catalysts not quite up to nature's standard
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News
Soaking spuds cuts cancer-risk chemical in chips
Washing or enzyme treatment reduces acrylamide formation during potato frying
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News
Arsenic enhances cancer imaging
Drug labelled with radioactive arsenic could spot even the smallest tumours
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News
Newer diesel engines emit more harmful nanoparticles
Soot from low-emission diesel engines penetrates deeper into lung tissue than fumes from older models
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News
Controversy over EPA removal of top toxicologist
Letters reveal ACC pushed for 'biased' chairwoman of scientific panel to go
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News
Sulfide sponge could clean up nuclear waste
Metal sulfide removes radioactive strontium from a mix of ions
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News
Atomic Etch A Sketch
Atomic force microscope can write and erase nanowires on a perovskite surface
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Podcast
March 2008
Chemistry World Podcast - March 200800:10 -- Introduction02.30-- Pernod still baffles chemists04.30-- Robots wake up and smell the coffee07.08-- Debate: Paul Burton from the Senlis Council think-tank and Thomas Pietschmann from the UN Office on Drugs and Crime discuss ...