All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2010-2015 – Page 155
-
News
Golden rice trial breached ethical guidelines
Three Chinese researchers sacked after failing to tell participants parents that rice was genetically modified
-
FeatureLife at the top
Does an academic chemistry career help or hinder when you move up the ladder? Nina Notman gives us an insight into the role of university leaders
-
ResearchRotaxane mimics ribosome to spin out peptides
Bio-inspired molecular machine can piece together three amino acids
-
Opinion
The art of thinking
Students are too busy to think and academics won't sit still. There may be trouble ahead.
-
Business
Pharma industry 'strategic crisis'
The problem is shrinking margins, caused by price and cost pressure, regulatory change and expiring patents, report says
-
Research
Nanotube fibre production in a spin
Strong, long and conductive: improved recipe means wet-spun carbon nanotube fibres can compete
-
Research
Following her passion
Veronique Gouverneur tells Marie Cote about fabulous fluorine and her next challenge
-
NewsIndia sets ambitious targets for science
Science policy aims to increase research funding to 2% of GDP by 2017 with the help of private enterprise
-
NewsSweetener in the clear once more
European food safety body finds no evidence linking aspartame to cancer or any other disease
-
Business
Laropiprant recalled
Merck & Co says it is recalling Tredaptive tablets, approved in the EU for treating patients with high cholesterol
-
Research
Spectrometry to the rescue!
Ion mobility spectrometry could replace sniffer dogs hunting for survivors in the wake of natural disasters
-
Research
Azo-cops nab CO2 but let N2 go free
Porous polymers could scrub carbon dioxide from power station flue gases
-
Business
UK companies struggling with Reach
Regulation is ‘elephant in the room’ as manufacturers fail to recognise implications
-
NewsNanotech patent jungle set to become denser in 2013
Is a thicket of patents strangling a nascent industry?
-
Research
Casting a shadow over green light bulbs
An analysis of the toxic metals in LEDs and CFLs shows that while they save energy their environmental legacy must not be forgotten
-
News
EU food agency links pesticides to bee decline
Agency says neonicotinoids should only be used on crops bees avoid but agrichemical companies dispute its findings
-
CareersCleaning up
From washing clothes to saving lives, the products of Phil Souter’s watery work can be found across the globe, as Helen Carmichael finds out
-
Research
New method to target malaria
By modifying an atomic force microscope tip with heparin, blood cells infected with the malaria parasite can be targeted