All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2010-2015 – Page 179
-
Business
Chemists contribute to prior art hunt
A crowdsourcing website that pays for prior art is gaining popularity – can chemists make money?
-
Feature
Stationary phases move ahead
What’s in those columns? Jon Evans looks at the increasingly sophisticated materials being used to separate compounds in chromatography
-
Business
More jobs go: Lonza cuts 500
A bid to ‘secure the future’ of the site at Visp in Switzerland
-
Research
No more tears tape
Quick release medical tape could reduce pain and damage in neonatal care
-
Research
Cardboard to create current from bacteria
Cheap and sustainable corrugated cardboard can be used in a microbial fuel cell to generate electricity
-
-
Careers
Any volunteers?
Volunteering is a great way to broaden your skills and experience, says Charlotte Ashley-Roberts
-
News
Algal biofuel's viability questioned
Large scale production of algal biofuels is currently unsustainable, says new report
-
Research
Prescription nanoreactors
A nanoreactor that synthesises and releases an antibiotic that is commonly used to treat bacterial infections
-
Research
Fireflies inspire low-cost LED lighting
Mimicking bioluminescent structures could help drive down the cost of manufacturing LEDs
-
Research
MOF based motorboat
Molecular self propulsion achieved by loading a MOF with a hydrophobic peptides fuel
-
Business
Patent woes lead to sharp sales losses
Bristol-Myers Squibb, AstraZeneca and Eli Lilly have all suffered loss of exclusivity for key drugs
-
News
Funding worries in UK higher education
Think tank calculates that UK tuition fees reform might not save any money at all
-
Research
Determining sex from a fingerprint
Mass spectroscopy can be used to determine the sex of a person from their fingerprints
-
-
Research
Molecular muscle machines bulk up
Iron co-ordination wrestles daisy-chain rotaxane molecular machines into a muscle-mimicking polymer
-
Opinion
20 years ago: degrading spacesuits
The National Air and Space Museum in Washington DC, US, has discovered that its reference collection of spacesuits is deteriorating rapidly
-