All Chemistry World articles in December 2020 – Page 4
-
-
-
ReviewSticking Together: The Science of Adhesion
This book will answer everything you ever wanted to know about how things stick to other things – from geckos to PVA adhesive
-
OpinionThomas Hartung: ‘I am not a funny guy’
The world-renowned toxicologist talks about animal models, his dog and diminishing trust in experts
-
PuzzleDecember 2020 puzzles
Download the puzzles from the December 2020 print issue of Chemistry World
-
BusinessBrexit may put some chemicals out of GB’s Reach
Industry fears divergence of UK and EU regulations could spell disaster for trade
-
OpinionLetters: December 2020
Readers muse on thermal hazard data, and ask for help with an embroidered periodic table
-
OpinionA common goal
A commitment to equality unites the chemical societies that make up the Commonwealth Chemistry community
-
OpinionMapping mercury contamination from mining
Social cartography as a tool for locating sources of pollution
-
ReviewBillion Dollar Burger: Inside Big Tech’s Race for the Future of Food
A perceptive account of what might be the the food industry’s next big thing: lab-grown meat
-
OpinionBerthelot’s bomb calorimeter
The romantic life of the man who measured the heat of combustion
-
FeatureHow does a cell know what kind of cell it should be?
Philip Ball investigates how cells use condensed ‘blobs’ to collect the molecules involved in regulating genes
-
OpinionDisabled scientists excluded from the lab
Inaccessibility continues to push disabled researchers out of science
-
-
-
ReviewUnfit for Purpose: When Human Evolution Collides with the Modern World
A friendly sort of commiseration that looks at all the ways our primitive bodies grapple with living a modern lifestyle
-
ReviewThe Quantum Matrix: Henry Bar’s Perilous Struggle for Quantum Coherence
Quantum mechanics in a creative comic form
-
ArticleAstraZeneca puts academia at the heart of pharma
At the heart of chemical biology are the molecules that make medicines effective and safe for consumers. AstraZeneca harnesses the scientists at the heart of academia to create a healthier world
-
FeatureThe name’s bond, chemical bond
Kathryn Harkup explores the poisons – real and fictional – used in Bond films
- Previous Page
- Page1
- Page2
- Page3
- Page4
- Next Page