All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2010-2015 – Page 133
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Research
Temperature responsive polymer stops overheating problem
Work by scientists in China could prevent supercapacitor self-destruction
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Feature
Patching the leaky pipeline
Women are leaving chemistry in greater numbers than men. Laura Howes looks at how to mend the leaky pipeline
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Business
Two way traffic for Chinese drug licensing
Western companies are seeing more value in Chinese innovation
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News
EPA pushes pesticide labels to protect bees
US agency’s new labels forbid use of some neonicotinoids where bees are present
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Research
Ball lightning captured in the lab
Scientists hope that prolonging the lifetime of glowing orbs of plasma will help them understand this mysterious and rare natural phenomenon
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News
Latvian scientists look for the exit as funding situation worsens
Austerity measures have seen research cash fall to half the levels of 2008 in the Baltic state
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Business
Boehringer to close manufacturing plants and cut jobs
Two US plants and a total of 640 jobs to go by the end of next year
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Research
Seeding removes barrier to curious cocrystal
The caffeinebenzoic acid cocrystal that has eluded scientists for 60 years has finally been crystallised
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Research
Nowhere for hydrazine to hide
New probe can detect hydrazine in air, water and even living cells
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News
Chinese drug watchdog set for major reforms
Measures will speed up drug approvals and decentralise controls on generics
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Research
A flexible future for robotics
Light responsive materials could enable machines to better mimic the movements of living creatures
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Research
Single molecule fights heart disease on two fronts
Could antioxidant that also inhibits cholesterol biosynthesis be more effective than statins?
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Careers
Different strokes
Carlos Gutierrez tells Yfke Hager why he’s devoted to supporting minorities entering science
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News
Indian U-turn on diabetes drug ban
Suspension of cheap and popular medicine reversed but will now come with new safety warnings
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Opinion
Diversity: leading the way
Julia Higgins discusses gender diversity in the sciences, what has been achieved and what still needs to be done
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Research
Destroying stable foam on demand
New cheap and reusable foam can be broken down by heat, light or a magnetic field
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Research
First agostic isomers uncovered from two-tone crystals
Serendipitous discovery of stable isomers as orange and blue crystals form from the same organometallic complex
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