Woman in front of colourful blackboard covered in lots of subjects

Opinion

Learning computational chemistry in a new role

A change of team brings new opportunities to build knowledge

Spider silk threads

News

Photo of coiling net-caster spider silk wins Royal Society competition

Stunning electron micrograph of silk structure among 10 scientific photos to win prizes  

Raj Shah

Opinion

Raj Shah: ‘A good laugh in the lab is often as important as a good reagent’

The award-winning chartered chemical engineer celebrates mentoring, curiosity and lubrication 

Scientists in the lab

Careers

Statements alone don’t make labs inclusive for disabled chemists

Leaders need to provide proactive support to disabled employees making adjustment requests

Irene Yurovsk

Careers

A love story: a polymer chemist accidentally falls for rubber

Born in 1950s Moscow, Irene Yurovska faced major hurdles as a Jewish woman but rubber bounced into her life and changed its trajectory forever

News

Royal Society of Chemistry calls for labs to become more inclusive for disabled chemists

Innovative thinking could address many of the problems that makes labs inaccessible

Opinion

Letraset’s transfers and placing precision back on the drawing board

Professional lettering with a few rubs of a ballpoint pen

Opinion

I was almost robbed of my love for chemistry – but I fought my way back

An abusive lab member made my dream course a nightmare. By speaking up, I’m reclaiming my joy

Highlights

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

Fossilised skull of  Australopithecus sediba, showing the teeth clearly

How stable isotope analysis reveals what ancient humans and Neanderthals ate

Analytical chemistry can tell us what our ancestors ate thousands – or even millions – of years ago. Rachel Brazil gets her teeth into the evidence

Cecilia Payne and spectral lines

The young female astronomer who worked out what the sun is made of

100 years ago, Cecilia Payne deduced that the sun is mainly made of hydrogen – but was encouraged to downplay her findings by her PhD supervisor. Mike Sutton takes up the story

Scientists in the lab

Statements alone don’t make labs inclusive for disabled chemists

Leaders need to provide proactive support to disabled employees making adjustment requests

Disability inclusive labs

News

Royal Society of Chemistry calls for labs to become more inclusive for disabled chemists

Innovative thinking could address many of the problems that makes labs inaccessible

Prize and medal RSC awards

Opinion

How the Royal Society of Chemistry is reshaping recognition in the chemical sciences

Changes over the past five years have enabled a wider variety of team and individual excellence to be celebrated

People constructing jigsaw

Opinion

Why an inclusive culture is the best way to unlock chemistry’s potential

Reasonable adjustments enable diverse teams that can grow, innovate and tackle global problems

Feature

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

News

Chemistry for the visually impaired that can be felt, heard and smelt

The Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, recently brought chemistry alive for students with sight loss

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

Raj Shah

Raj Shah: ‘A good laugh in the lab is often as important as a good reagent’

The award-winning chartered chemical engineer celebrates mentoring, curiosity and lubrication 

Odile Eisenstein

Odile Eisenstein: ‘Some of the most important advice is to be persistent’

The pioneering theoretical chemist on teaching herself programming and the importance of freedom

Robert Huber

Robert Huber: ‘I call the last century the century of vision’

The Nobel laureate on the joys of entering a developing field, and the century of vision

Scientist in the lab

Opinion

What makes a scientific breakthrough truly chemical?

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

Woman examining two cosmetics bottles

Opinion

The conceptual challenge of consumer safety

Understanding causation can motivate product improvements

Opinion

What the smell of benzene tells us about the world

A philosophical discussion about how much we can trust our senses

Opinion

How feminist bioethics can improve women’s health

From correcting research imbalances to placing value on lived experiences

Opinion

Symbols and tables in chemistry

Looking beyond today’s periodic table

Opinion

In search of truth and rules

To codify and predict ever more complex phenomena is one of science’s great drivers

Opinion

Classifications, racial discrimination and Covid-19

Lessons with philosophical significance for how we group people and objects

Opinion

The moral theories behind climate deadlock

Why is it so controversial to do the right thing for the environment?

Emma Brass

News

’Chemistry is incredibly complicated’: The interface between chemistry and art

Liverpool PhD student Emma Brass talks to Chemistry World about her AI-powered art installation 

Odile Eisenstein

Opinion

Odile Eisenstein: ‘Some of the most important advice is to be persistent’

The pioneering theoretical chemist on teaching herself programming and the importance of freedom

Hoverfly

Webinar

Nature’s amazing chemistry: reflections on its complexity and diversity

Take a walk on the wild side to discover the wacky and wonderful chemical mysteries of the natural world

Transfers

Opinion

Letraset’s transfers and placing precision back on the drawing board

Professional lettering with a few rubs of a ballpoint pen

Research

Roman-era ink reveals surprising chemical complexity

2000-year-old residue indicates the Romans wrote with iron-gall inks hundreds of years earlier than expected

Opinion

The wide-ranging influence of the Bohr effect

While not a Nobel prize-winning discovery in itself, this challenge to the reductionist view of physiology has links to several other winners

Opinion

Why an inclusive culture is the best way to unlock chemistry’s potential

Reasonable adjustments enable diverse teams that can grow, innovate and tackle global problems

Feature

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

Woman in front of colourful blackboard covered in lots of subjects

Opinion

Learning computational chemistry in a new role

A change of team brings new opportunities to build knowledge

Spider silk threads

News

Photo of coiling net-caster spider silk wins Royal Society competition

Stunning electron micrograph of silk structure among 10 scientific photos to win prizes  

Opinion

Raj Shah: ‘A good laugh in the lab is often as important as a good reagent’

The award-winning chartered chemical engineer celebrates mentoring, curiosity and lubrication 

Careers

Statements alone don’t make labs inclusive for disabled chemists

Leaders need to provide proactive support to disabled employees making adjustment requests

News

Royal Society of Chemistry calls for labs to become more inclusive for disabled chemists

Innovative thinking could address many of the problems that makes labs inaccessible

Opinion

I was almost robbed of my love for chemistry – but I fought my way back

An abusive lab member made my dream course a nightmare. By speaking up, I’m reclaiming my joy

Spider silk threads

News

Photo of coiling net-caster spider silk wins Royal Society competition

Stunning electron micrograph of silk structure among 10 scientific photos to win prizes  

Transfers

Opinion

Letraset’s transfers and placing precision back on the drawing board

Professional lettering with a few rubs of a ballpoint pen

Actor holding a skull with lab specs on

Opinion

What can biochemists learn from drama?

How my acting background helps me build my scientific skills

Rift

News

Just 29% of the UK public have a personal interest in R&D

Survey results suggest ‘broad but shallow’ public support for research sector

Careers

The chemist who commemorates lab discoveries on his body

University of Nebraska’s drug design centre director is communicating his team’s scientific breakthroughs with tattoos and now has 29 on his arm

Opinion

The lost treasure of electron microscopy

Unpublished images should be brought to light to aid science communication and speed up discovery

Careers

Comic book chemistry

The scientists using visual storytelling to communicate their work – and how you can do it too