All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2010-2015 – Page 226
-
News
Iron accumulation linked to neurogenerative disease
New discovery suggests iron chelation could treat diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's
-
News
Settlement ups UK universities' dependency on fees
Grant letter holds research funding steady while student numbers are set to drop next year
-
News
Calculations reveal carbon-carbon quadruple bond
High bonding order possible in main group and may be responsible for the ability to isolate molecular species
-
News
Obama calls for renewed focus on manufacturing
Although chemical trade groups support the president's emphasis on manufacturing and energy, they caution against overregulation
-
News
Illumina fends off Roche hostile bid
Roche aims to expand personalised medicine diagnostics by acquiring the gene sequencing leader
-
Feature
Damage limitation
Emma Davies investigates attempts to stem the flow of potentially harmful fluorinated chemicals into both our environment and our bloodstreams
-
Feature
Silver soils
Nanosilver is filtering into the environment in ever-increasing quantities. But is it the nano or the silver component we should be worrying about, asks Hayley Birch
-
Opinion
Letters: February 2012
In his comment article, David Fox (Chemistry World, January 2012, p42) highlights the importance of having access to a well-curated repository of small molecules for drug discovery (and chemical genomics), but he feels that it is important to ’combine a well-validated target with a means of intervention that minimises attrition ...
-
Feature
Keeping the tap on
James Mitchell Crow investigates routes to quenching our thirst without costing the Earth
-
Careers
Managing change: Patent protectors
When it comes to the world of patents, a chemist's knowledge of the laws of the lab can be as important as knowing the laws of the land, as Sarah Houlton finds out
-
Careers
Careers clinic: Analytical aspirations
Charlotte Ashley-Roberts puts the work of analytical chemists under the microscope
-
Careers
Profile: The drugs detective
Rian Charles tells Hayley Birch that getting a job as a forensic scientist takes conviction
-
Careers
The insider: Seeds of Change
Yfke Hager takes a look at careers in agricultural chemistry and the scientists who are working to feed the world
-
Opinion
The language of the lab
Derek Lowe wonders what the lab lingua franca might be in the years to come
-
Opinion
A packed dancefloor
To understand the chemical choreography of the cell, we must acknowledge the bustling biomolecular ballroom in which it takes place, says Philip Ball