All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2010-2015 – Page 126
-
Business
Aspen acquires anticoagulant brands
South African drugmaker buys thrombosis drugs from GSK for £700m
-
News
Poland gets serious on plagiarism
Government plans scheme to check all theses submitted since September 2005
-
Research
New software for creating green solvents
A green chemistry-focussed approach to solvent design on an industrial scale
-
Opinion
Divided by a common language
American and British English may differ, but data has no borders
-
Business
Japan confirms Novartis clinical trial data fabrication
Investigation into blood pressure blockbuster continues
-
Opinion
Crystallography 101
Philip Ball reflects on a century of progress in the science of structure
-
News
Oak Ridge lab plans voluntary layoffs for 10% of workers
Budgetary pressure leads to offer of voluntary separation packages to as many as 475 of its 4500 employees
-
Feature
Seek and destroy
Nanoparticles that can find specific targets before delivering a drug could change medicine. Akshat Rathi investigates
-
News
Greek universities struggle in face of job cuts
Closures and strikes follow mass lay-offs of administrative staff
-
Business
Clariant expands into China
Firm buys pigments arm of Jiangsu Multicolor and will build new plant
-
Research
Mutant enzymes help break cocaine habit
A treatment for cocaine abuse could be on the horizon
-
Opinion
Flashback: 1983 – a new award from the RSC
The Sir Edward Frankland Fellowship was launched to encourage research in organometallic chemistry or coordination chemistry of transition metals
-
Feature
Giving screening the green light
Chemists are working with toxicologists at an earlier stage to avoid problems further down the chain, as Emma Davies reports
-
Business
Algal oil producer steps up supply
Solazyme to provide 10,000 tonnes of tailored oil to Unilever
-
Business
Norway abandons full-scale CCS project
Technology development centre will receive extra funding
-
-
Research
Night of the nearly dead steroid
Cattle growth hormone that breaks down during the day can regenerate at night with consequences for monitoring endocrine disruptors
-
Research
Kelvin’s water dropper miniaturised on a chip
Kelvin’s 150 year old hydroelectric generator has been reinvented at the micro scale and could power small devices