All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2004-2009 – Page 90
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News
Threat to future of European synchrotron
Doubt over German and UK funding for the upgrade of ESRF
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Careers
Dodging the pitfalls when commercialising research
Considering cashing in on your research? Here's what not to do...
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News
Graphene sheets with less flap
Chemical trickery allows separation by electrostatic repulsion alone
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Opinion
Letters: February 2008
From Chris Ewels The British Carbon Group (a special interest group of the RSC, the Institute of Physics and the Society of Chemical Industry) is organising an image competition, including a category for under-18s. There is a ?150 prize in each category and there will be a prize-giving ...
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Review
Are nano-particles safe?
Nanotechnology is still a futuristic rather than a contemporary industry
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Review
Chemistry at the heart of drug action
The target audience for this book is pharmacy students and academic teams who are responsible for pharmacy training courses
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Review
Synthesis-a science and an art
The past decade has seen some very fine books on the art and science of total synthesis
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Review
Element with a chequered past
Year by year chemistry students explore the diverse history of chlorine
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Feature
The chemists who saved biology
A long voyage led one young chemist to steer evolutionary biology onto the right course. Richard Corfield explores the life of chemistry's Darwin
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Feature
A town called science
An ambitious project in Switzerland aims to create the world's first fully integrated science city. Yfke Hager reports
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Feature
The chemistry of private equity
Private equity has transformed the chemicals industry, but can it play the same role in high-risk R&D driven companies? Nuala Moran reports
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Feature
Resistance is useless
Chemistry holds the key to commercialisation of high-temperature superconductors that could revolutionise electrical power supply
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Careers
The meteoric rise of Adam Cohen
Adam Cohen moved from his bedroom electronics laboratory to become assistant professor at Harvard University within ten years. Yfke Hager finds out about his meteoric academic rise