All Chemistry World articles in January 2018 – Page 2
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Opinion
Changing the reproducibility rulebook
It pays to know when taking shortcuts is acceptable, and which it’s safe to take
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Feature
From venoms to medicine
Venoms are a treasure trove of peptides that may provide a bounty of novel painkillers
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Opinion
'We all want to be The Dude'
Venki Ramakrishnan on optimism, Jane Austen and why he wants to be Jeff Bridges
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Opinion
Letters: January 2018
You tell us about motherhood in science, Ernest Rutherford and why all roads shouldn’t lead to London
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Business
DuPont and Sumitomo link up for seed treatments
Firms will collaborate to develop and commercialise seed-applied technologies
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Business
Bayer and J&J lose first blood thinner lawsuit
US jury fines Xarelto makers $27.8 million for downplaying drug risks
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News
Dangerous levels of mercury detected in Minamata meeting delegates
Mercury concentrations more than three times the health advisory threshold found in representatives from small island nations
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News
Public trust in scientists at record high
According to poll, 83% of the British public think scientists are trustworthy
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News
Thousands of US drug convictions overturned by rogue chemist's actions
Massachusetts forensic chemist’s misconduct has led state district attorneys to dismiss more than 6000 drug sentences
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Opinion
A tricky year
The Trump administration’s approach to conflicts of interest is emblematic of its problem with evidence
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Research
Telescope arrangement puts a twist on organic synthesis
Solvents, move aside – scientists achieve dry multicomponent synthesis in a single step with twisting screws
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Business
EU extends glyphosate licence by 5 years
Extending herbicide’s approval until December 2022 has pleased neither industry nor environmental campaigners
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Research
Longest molecular chain paves way to interlocked polymers
Polymers made of mechanically interlocked molecules could make for strong but flexible materials
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Research
Calcium breaks ‘like repels like’ rule in benzene alkylation
Serendipitous discovery sees main-group metal topple textbook paradigm
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Business
Something fishy about eating insects
While insects as human food remain a novelty in the West, fly larvae grown on human food waste could soon become an important protein source for fish farms
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News
Misconduct scandal hits UK forensics lab
Thousands of criminal cases may have to be revisited due to botched drug tests
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Business
European drug regulator heads to Amsterdam
Brexit drives EMA to relocate, taking hundreds of jobs and significant expertise away from UK
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