Suvarna Sujilkumar

Careers

How a binational PhD opens two doors to a future research career

Top tips from Suvarna Sujilkumar, who is currently pursuing a Binational PhD at Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) Thiruvananthapuram, India and Julius Maximilians-Universität Würzburg (JMU), Germany

Jake Bruml

Careers

From baseball to chemistry, and back again

With a lifelong passion for baseball and love of science, Jake Bruml began his career in biotech but transitioned to direct scouting for the Boston Red Sox

Man as Swiss knife

Opinion

The art of not letting the lab burn down

Behind every experiment is a technician quietly preventing catastrophe

Benjamin Oakes

Business

Rewriting genetic medicine

Scribe Therapeutics will soon begin clinical trials for its epigenetic treatment to tackle ‘bad’ cholesterol

Maxie Rößler

Research

Watching unpaired electrons at work

From building the Centre for Pulse EPR at Imperial to probing electron transfer in real time, Maxie Rößler is pushing an overlooked technique into the spotlight

Opinion

Jonathan Clayden: ‘I like to feel that we have set the curriculum rather than followed the curriculum’

The co-author of the much-loved Organic Chemistry shares his insights on creating a chemistry textbook

Opinion

Rewriting the textbooks – authors tell us how they do it

Peter Atkins, Catherine Housecroft and Jonathan Clayden guide us through the changing world of textbooks

Opinion

Catherine Housecroft: ‘Undergraduates do not want to buy big, heavy textbooks’

The author of the authoritative Inorganic Chemistry discusses how changing student attitudes have led the shift to digital resources

Highlights

Strassmann, Meitner and Hanh

Fritz Strassmann: the principled chemist who discovered nuclear fission

Analytical chemist Friedrich Strassmann played a crucial role in discovering nuclear fission with Otto Hahn and Lise Meitner, but his principled opposition to Nazi ideology nearly destroyed his career. His story of scientific rigour and moral courage deserves greater recognition

Closeup of woman applying skin lightening cream

The toxic chemistry behind skin bleaching products

The global skin-lightening market is worth over $10 billion and growing, but the unregulated products driving it contain dangerous chemicals linked to serious health risks. Zahra Khan speaks to the scientists and advocates trying to fix the problem

2025 Nobel prize winners

How the pioneers of metal-organic frameworks won the Nobel prize

From wooden models to thousands and thousands of structures, Julia Robinson tells the story of how Richard Robson, Susumu Kitagawa and Omar Yaghi won the 2025 Nobel prize in chemistry

Brain made out of different textures

Rethinking workplaces for neurodivergent staff

Neurodivergent people often excel in skills highly valued in chemistry. Nina Notman investigates how employers are breaking down barriers and harnessing these talents through workplace adjustments and recruitment reforms

Two witches brewing a spell in a cauldron

From flying ointments to healing herbs: the forgotten chemistry behind historical witchcraft practices

The unusual concoctions of village witches have historically been dismissed as nonsense hocus pocus – but is this the whole story? Victoria Atkinson investigates the chemistry behind the myth and whether there was more to witchcraft than ritual and superstition

Lab equipment

Making lab equipment more accessible for chemists with physical disabilities

‘Chemical laboratories are often designed around a very narrow idea of standard talent,’ says one academic striving to make such spaces more inclusive

People talking at round table

Opinion

How learning languages helps me become a better scientist

Lessons from a multicultural scientific journey

Hand drawing red dividing line separating groups of people

News

Socioeconomic background still holding back students in chemistry, RSC report finds

Access is only the first step to making the chemical sciences inclusive

Woman writing on fume cupboard

News

National scientific organisations consistently underrepresent women within their membership

Change is happening slowly but institutional processes continue to stymie the progression of women

Opinion

As a first-generation student, I didn’t have a clue what I was doing

And that brought challenges and unexpected opportunites

News

Royal Society asks for help as it unveils interactive UK map charting memorialisation of women in science

Locations, landmarks and monuments dotted throughout the UK highlight the contributions of women

Feature

The toxic chemistry behind skin bleaching products

The global skin-lightening market is worth over $10 billion and growing, but the unregulated products driving it contain dangerous chemicals linked to serious health risks. Zahra Khan speaks to the scientists and advocates trying to fix the problem

An illustrated portrait of Mary Sherman Morgan

Mary Sherman Morgan: The best kept secret in the space race

Anna Demming reveals the scientist who invented the fuel that powered the first US satellite into orbit, yet died with barely a trace on record of her achievements

An image showing a framed portrait of Martin Gouterman

Martin Gouterman: the gay man behind the four-orbital model

Abhik Ghosh tells the story of a porphyrin chemist who was a leading figure in Seattle’s gay rights movement of the 1960s

William Knox Jr

William Knox, the only Black supervisor in the Manhattan Project

The story of the Knox family is one of education overcoming adversity, finds Kit Chapman

Ben Zhong Tang

Ben Zhong Tang: ‘If you have to do something, try to do it well’

The polymer chemist on finding love for a subject, working with others and staying optimistic

Stephen Liddle

Steve Liddle: ‘Try and do something different to what everyone else is doing’

The organometallic chemist on working with the f-elements, following your instinct and remaining grounded

Veronica Vaida

Veronica Vaida: ‘Some Harvard faculty expressed puzzlement at having a woman colleague’

The renowned physical chemist and environmental scientist on growing up in Romania and forging her career as a woman in the US in the 1970s

AI black box

Opinion

Could AI undermine our (belief in the truth of) scientific theories?

Artificial intelligence models that make predictions based solely on data present problems for philosophers

Ben Zhong Tang

Opinion

Ben Zhong Tang: ‘If you have to do something, try to do it well’

The polymer chemist on finding love for a subject, working with others and staying optimistic

Opinion

Is that a fact, or your opinion?

When experts are sidelined or undermined, the truth needs all the allies it can get

Opinion

Chemistry has always been women’s business

Female chemists played essential roles in developing chemical practice

Opinion

Archaeon’s lack of metabolism challenges definitions of life

A question that is not the same as asking whether something is alive

Opinion

Democratising science, one step at a time

Artifical intelligence is just the latest method to open up chemistry to more people

Book

Crucibles: from alchemy to chemistry

An excerpt from Philip Ball’s book Alchemy traces chemistry back to its beginnings

Opinion

What makes a scientific breakthrough truly chemical?

Why MOFs are a great choice for the Nobel prize in chemistry

Inorganic chemistry textbooks

Opinion

Catherine Housecroft: ‘Undergraduates do not want to buy big, heavy textbooks’

The author of the authoritative Inorganic Chemistry discusses how changing student attitudes have led the shift to digital resources

Physical chemistry textbooks

Opinion

Peter Atkins: ‘Rather than a single author book with an author’s voice, it’s becoming more of a committee construction’

The author of the venerable Physical Chemistry on how writing chemistry textbooks has changed over his career

Ocean waves along the shoreline from an overhead view

Webinar

Marine chemistry in a warming world: preserving Earth’s largest natural buffer

2026-07-15T14:00:002026-07-15T14:00:002026-07-15T15:00:00

Join us on 15 July to learn how climate change is affecting the ocean’s biogeochemical cycles

Woman holding children in front of barrier of Zone A during Seveso disaster

Feature

Seveso disaster at 50: how Italy’s dioxin catastrophe transformed chemical safety

On 10 July 1976, a chemical reactor near Milan released a cloud containing dioxin over residential areas. The Seveso disaster traumatised a community, sparked pan-European environmental campaigns and transformed industrial safety regulation across the continent. 

Webinar

Marine chemistry in a warming world: preserving Earth’s largest natural buffer

2026-07-15T14:00:002026-07-15T14:00:002026-07-15T15:00:00

Join us on 15 July to learn how climate change is affecting the ocean’s biogeochemical cycles

Opinion

A museum mould mystery

Even best practices aren’t always enough to protect heritage sites

News

National scientific organisations consistently underrepresent women within their membership

Change is happening slowly but institutional processes continue to stymie the progression of women

Opinion

As a first-generation student, I didn’t have a clue what I was doing

And that brought challenges and unexpected opportunites

Suvarna Sujilkumar

Careers

How a binational PhD opens two doors to a future research career

Top tips from Suvarna Sujilkumar, who is currently pursuing a Binational PhD at Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) Thiruvananthapuram, India and Julius Maximilians-Universität Würzburg (JMU), Germany

Jake Bruml

Careers

From baseball to chemistry, and back again

With a lifelong passion for baseball and love of science, Jake Bruml began his career in biotech but transitioned to direct scouting for the Boston Red Sox

Opinion

The art of not letting the lab burn down

Behind every experiment is a technician quietly preventing catastrophe

Careers

Making lab equipment more accessible for chemists with physical disabilities

‘Chemical laboratories are often designed around a very narrow idea of standard talent,’ says one academic striving to make such spaces more inclusive

Opinion

What kinds of reactions do you do most?

Variety may be the spice of life, but there’s space for the boring but effective

Careers

Meet the researchers finding fulfilment in leadership and administration

When a research responsibilities expand into something with a wider impact

CC Congress

Opinion

Building global links and growing local chemistry talent in The Gambia

Members of the Chemical Society of The Gambia have experienced success since joining Commonwealth Chemistry

Detergent foam bubble on water with blue background.

Webinar

How and why soap works: the science behind the suds

2026-06-25T14:00:002026-06-25T14:00:002026-06-25T15:00:00

Discover the chemistry behind our favourite household cleaner

Sailing old ship in a storm sea with full moon stormy clouds in the background

Podcast

Inert materials & the Mary Celeste

In this episode, we discuss how to ensure experimental instruments are truly inert, chemistry’s answer to the fate of the Mary Celeste, and hear the latest headlines.

Mary Celeste

News

Chemists think they know what happened on board the Mary Celeste

While many theories have surfaced as to what caused a loaded ship to be devoid of its crew, could this explanation close the case?

News

Physicist's piezoelectric pirouettes claims top spot at this year’s Dance your PhD competition

Contemporary dance explains why some materials generate electricity under stress

Opinion

How sketching and painting have enhanced my scientific practice

A visual approach to chemistry aids discovery and communication

News

Record-breaking chemistry experiments: from giant crystals to lemon batteries

School science staples that have set Guinness World Records