All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2010-2015 – Page 116
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Opinion
Cosmic Chemistry
Perhaps the island of stability lives among the stars instead of at the bottom of the periodic table
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Research
Broccoli eases diesel sneezes
Compound found in brassicas alleviates the irritating effects of pollution for allergy and asthma sufferers
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News
Lack of planning has hamstrung the UK's science base
Lords’ committee warns failure to act will see the country’s competitiveness on the global stage dwindle
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Research
Base metal catalysts strike hydrogenation gold
Iron and cobalt enable asymmetric hydrogenations of alkenes, imines, ketones and selective reduction of nitroarenes
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Opinion
Put the chemistry back in medicinal chemistry
Pursuing skewed priorities and easy options has impoverished the pharmaceutical industry, says David Lathbury.
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Opinion
Flashback: 1988 – chemistry in Westminster
MPs were entertained with dry ice at the RSC’s first chemistry week exhibition in Westminster
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Research
MEDIC to kick-start personalised medicine revolution
Sensor will continuously monitor drug concentrations in real time letting doctors tailor treatments to the patient
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News
Mercury levels falls in US women
Environmental Protection Agency believes women’s fish choices are responsible for the reduction
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Research
A cytochrome from scratch
Scientists trick nature’s machinery into producing their artificial proteins
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News
Forensic chemist imprisoned for falsifying tests
US crime lab analyst sentenced to three to five years for tampering with narcotics evidence, obstructing justice
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Research
Magnetic replicas capture pollen’s sticking power
Sticky pollen grains converted to magnetic microparticles by coating them with layers of iron oxide
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Opinion
Rolling boulders uphill
Is Derek Lowe troubled by his failure to develop a compound that has made it to the pharmacy shelf?
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Business
Reach is a big trade barrier, say US manufacturers
Europe says requirements for US companies are the same as for EU competitors
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Feature
Farming tomorrow
Technology is helping farmers better control the use of fertilisers and pesticides, as Elisabeth Jeffries reports
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News
Massive European science programme finalised
A total of €78.6 billion is up for grabs for researchers – both applied and blue skies – as well as R&D heavy businesses
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Opinion
Gone to completion
After a 66-step journey, Paul Docherty ponders the future of total synthesis in his final column
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Research
World's smallest bubbles put chemistry under pressure
Graphene nanobubbles let scientists probe exotic chemistry like fullerene polymerisation