All Chemistry World articles in June 2017 – Page 3
-
ResearchWatery atmosphere discovered on Neptune-sized exoplanet
Data from Hubble and Spitzer telescopes gives clues to planet’s formation
-
BusinessMerck KGaA to buy Chematica
Retrosynthesis tool will gain computational muscle and integrate with Sigma–Aldrich catalogue
-
NewsEx-Harvard postdoc sues university for drug royalties
Former Harvard chemist says he lost out on millions after the technology he worked on was licensed to Merck & Co
-
BusinessJ&J fights talc cancer claims
Firm has lost several court cases linking talc to ovarian cancer, but vows to appeal
-
BusinessUS Steel plant spills chromium into waterway
Pipe failure releases 135kg of hexavalent chromium into Lake Michigan tributary
-
ResearchFractal crystals win fashion design contest
Organic compounds form peculiar geometric crystals due to inefficient molecular stacking
-
BusinessAvantor to buy VWR for $6.4bn
Deal continues trend of consolidation in laboratory supplies sector
-
ResearchChanging climate to wreak havoc on Mediterranean soils
Soil organic carbon predicted to plummet over next 60 years lowering agricultural productivity
-
NewsLegal battles stall US biosimilars
Unclear legislation and lack of regulatory guidance means companies are turning to the courts
-
ResearchElectronegativity of a single atom measured
Catalysts could be improved by mapping surface variations using new technique
-
OpinionDid life emerge from hell on Earth?
Why our origins may lie in the Hadean era, 4 billion years ago
-
NewsUK crops at risk if EU pesticide ban expanded
Agricultural research institute calls for unbiased research on pesticides linked to bee decline
-
Feature200 years of Gmelin’s handbook
2017 marks 200 years since Leopold Gmelin first published his influential handbook – and it’s still going strong, as Mike Sutton discovers
-
NewsThe great beauty of chemistry
Heritage science is growing fast and Rocco Mazzeo wants more chemists to chip in
-
OpinionHow safe should drugs be?
What does spotting new risks in approved medicines say about how effective regulators are?
-
CareersGetting on the soapbox for science
The women researchers fighting sexism in science communication
-
OpinionTime to act on conflict minerals
We must end the human cost of tin, tungsten, tantalum and gold
-
-
NewsR&D election funding pledges put research at heart of UK economy
For the first time both main parties promise to lift investment to 3% of GDP
-
OpinionWhat could peer review look like in 2030?
AI, credit for reviewers and more pre-prints: Mark Peplow considers the options
- Previous Page
- Page1
- Page2
- Page3
- Page4
- Next Page