All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2010-2015 – Page 5

  • News

    In the papers

    2010-01-28T13:31:42Z

    Short items

  • CLASSIC-KIT-200
    Opinion

    Petri dish

    2010-01-28T13:34:00Z

    When I was about 16, I came across a peculiar novel in my father's study

  • Opinion

    Comment

    2010-01-28T13:34:48Z

    Copenhagen raises problems but does not address solutions, says James Barber

  • Feature

    Chemistry bites

    2010-01-28T13:43:06Z

    Simon Hadlington previews the novel materials coming soon to a dental surgery near you

  • Opinion

    Papers vs patents

    2010-01-28T13:45:00Z

    Derek Lowe wonders whether peer-reviewed papers or patents are more reliable

  • Opinion

    Snowflake Symmetry

    2010-01-28T13:45:00Z

    Philip Ball warms up the subject of snowflake structure

  • Opinion

    Column: Totally Synthetic

    2010-01-28T13:45:42Z

    Palau'amine

  • News

    US helium strategy threatens supply

    2010-01-28T14:20:00Z

    The US should change how helium is sold from its federal stockpile to remove influence over world markets and avert national shortages

  • Careers

    The Educated Chemist: More than maple syrup

    2010-01-28T14:38:19Z

    In Canada, food is big business. A network of university and government labs, along with industry, offer lots of job opportunities for food scientists. Helen Carmichael reports

  • Careers

    Profile: Chemistry in a canoe

    2010-01-28T14:41:08Z

    Vancouver-based chemist Jennifer Love spends her free time kayaking, which helps open her mind to new research ideas, writes Karen Harries-Rees

  • Careers

    Company Profile: Poised for success

    2010-01-28T14:49:33Z

    Vancouver-based Xenon Pharmaceuticals is turning heads. Charles Cohen tells Helen Carmichael about the company's research, and its close ties with British Columbia's universities

  • Careers

    Careers clinic: Move to Canada

    2010-01-28T14:55:02Z

    Many dream of leaving the UK behind and Canada is a tempting destination. Caroline Tolond advises on how to prepare for such a life-changing move

  • Opinion

    Letters: February 2010

    2010-01-28T15:06:00Z

    Source: © BETTMANN/CORBIS C P Snow - author, physicist, diplomat C P Snow, the subject of Mathew Waugh’s ’Last retort’ (Chemistry World, December 2009, p88), knew and greatly admired J Desmond Bernal. Snow’s first novel The Search (1934) included a character modelled on Bernal and tells the ...

  • Feature

    The will to win

    2010-01-28T15:06:18Z

    While Canada may win medals when it hosts the 2010 Winter Olympics, when it comes to innovation the nation is still finding its feet. Helen Carmichael reports

  • Opinion

    A fiddle and a fraud

    2010-01-28T15:07:00Z

    Chemistry, I fear, started as a fiddle and a fraud

  • Opinion

    Flashback

    2010-01-28T15:07:05Z

    30 years ago in Chemistry in Britain

  • Feature

    What's bugging the bees?

    2010-01-28T15:11:00Z

    Insecticides, pathogens, stress? Michael Gross reports on possible explanations for the mysterious vanishing of honeybee colonies

  • News

    Better batteries with nano-cables

    2010-01-28T15:30:00Z

    Bright future for high-capacity Li-ion batteries from titanium dioxide coated carbon nanotubes

  • News

    AstraZeneca's workforce slashed again

    2010-01-28T15:40:00Z

    Research and development takes a hit as AstraZeneca announces plans to slash another 8,000 jobs worldwide

  • Feature

    Identifying the lost soldiers of Fromelles

    2010-01-29T09:19:21Z

    More than 90 years on, recently found bodies of 250 soldiers who died during the Battle of Fromelles in the first world war need identifying. Richard Corfield investigates