All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2010-2015 – Page 88
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Feature
Triple-stranded success story
Tom Brown is our Entrepreneur of the Year. He tells Sarah Houlton the secrets of his success
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Careers
Remote possibilities
Now you can graduate in drug discovery without ever leaving the house, as Sarah Houlton finds out
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Research
Diamond set to sparkle for nanoelectronics
Straightforward etching of sub-100nm structures onto diamond overcomes problems with defects
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Business
Nano risk register not necessary, says BASF
Reach covers the relevant information, and a register risks attracting unwarranted stigma
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Podcast
Chemistry World podcast - June 2014
We speak to Tom Brown, the 2014 Chemistry World Entrepreneur of the Year, and find out why cells spend so much time doing nothing
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Research
Squid skin conductor for bioelectronics
Transistors made from reflectin protein could bridge the gap between electronic and biological systems
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News
Taking responsibility
Sara Cooper talks about safety in the lab and how it’s up to everyone to create a safe environment
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Opinion
How good do you want it?
Quality analysis is a very different ball game to a simple reaction check, says Chemjobber
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Opinion
It belongs to the people
How Marie Curie’s desire to share her science for the common good priced her out of the game
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Research
Cluster structure promises acid advance
After a 40-year wait, new information on how water clusters around protons stands to benefit our understanding of acids.
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News
China plans ‘green’ open access future
Major Chinese science funders want research they pay for publicly available within a year
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Opinion
Flashback: 2004 – big, big pharma
Aventis accepted a takeover bid from French rival Sanofi Synthélabo, creating the world’s third largest pharma giant
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Opinion
Messy megamergers
Big company buyouts are more about immediate gains and rarely consider the impact on research, says Derek Lowe
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Feature
Safety first?
Just how safe is working in a laboratory? Jon Evans discovers that it depends on where you are
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Research
Dual warhead kills and disarms bacteria
Compound damages bacterial membrane and disables resistance mechanism in a two-pronged attack
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Business
Chinese-made DNA sequencer aims to challenge foreign dominance
Domestic instrument pitching for a slice of the world’s fastest growing genome sequencing market
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Opinion
We need to talk about Nagoya
Darren Smyth explains why the Nagoya Protocol could become a problem for European research
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Business
Boehringer to settle blood thinner drug suits for $650m
Company confident in drug safety but says court cases are too risky