All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2010-2015 – Page 79
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Research
Turing patterns show their hand in finger formation
After 62 years, scientists clinch the identification of molecules that confirm codebreaker’s ideas in a different ‘digital’ area
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Research
Tracking complex reactions in space and time
Scientific measurements taken with seemingly non-scientific equipment
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Research
New source of hydroxyl radicals found in the clouds
Ozone chemistry at air–water interface may increase radical formation four-fold
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Feature
The worldwide chemist
Bea Perks profiles Martyn Poliakoff, the internet’s favourite ‘mad professor’
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Business
AstraZeneca stocks respiratory and cancer pipelines
A $2bn deal with Almirall and a raft of acquisitions and partnership deals bulk up two focus areas for the company
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Opinion
Psylloborine A
Late stage dimerisation is a tantalisingly elegant but risky strategy for total synthesis, says BRSM
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Research
Underwater self-healing polymer mimics mussels
Temporary hydrogen bonding network stitches damage as the material fuses together
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Business
Bruker winds down underperforming instrument lines
Stand-alone gas chromatographs and certain mass spectrometry products to be sold off
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Podcast
Isoamyl acetate
It makes a sweet banana-flavoured treat, but can ruin home brewed beer; Jenna Bilbrey introduces isoamyl acetate
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Research
Spray-deposition steers perovskite solar cells towards commercialisation
Scientists make headway on scalability hurdles
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Research
Nanoparticle protects protein drug cargo
Proteins cling to co-polymer thanks to electrostatic interactions
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Feature
The other carbon dioxide problem
Carbon dioxide produced by human activity is acidifying the ocean at an unprecedented and alarming rate. Nina Notman investigates
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Opinion
The crystal ball that can tell lies
X-ray structures are not necessarily definitive, says Derek Lowe, especially when it comes to biomolecules
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Careers
West side stories
A stint in a US chemistry lab is a rite of passage for many academics. Sarah Houlton talks to the chemists who went to the labs of opportunity
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Research
Plant plastics reach for the stars
Star-shaped additives transform rice starch into a useful transparent plastic
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Opinion
The fascinating in the familiar
A simple droplet shows that there are still plenty of puzzles to ponder in everyday observations, says Philip Ball
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News
Future direction of Dutch science considered
Role of private industry heads a number of issues that confront how science is put to work for society
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