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Chemistry World July 22, 2013 Rowan Frame |
Flexible supercapacitors for portable electronics Scientists from Germany have created a supercapacitor that is just 50 nanometers thick and less than 5 millimeters wide. The tiny supercapacitor has been successfully integrated into miniaturized, flexible electronic circuits. |
Chemistry World July 19, 2013 Emma Stoye |
Former student sues Harvard for $10 million Chemistry graduate Mark Charest has filed a lawsuit against his former university and advisor seeking $10 million in a dispute over royalties. |
Chemistry World July 18, 2013 Emma Stoye |
Flexible electronics boost with stretchiest conductor ever made US researchers have made the stretchiest electrical conductor yet using gold nanoparticles embedded in an elastic polymer. The new material can stretch to over five times its size while still conducting well enough to power small devices. |
Chemistry World July 18, 2013 Emma Stoye |
Hovering reaction driven by sound Colleagues at ETH Zurich in Switzerland used their acoustic levitator to create an explosive mid-air reaction between a tiny water droplet and a grain of sodium. |
Chemistry World July 18, 2013 Patrick Walter |
Call to arms on data integrity Data integrity in the chemical sciences is under the spotlight. In a broadside aimed at shoddy data practices, the editor of Organic Letters, Amos Smith, has called on chemists to put their house in order and root out poor practice. |
Chemistry World July 10, 2013 Karl Collins |
An 'Aye' for details Today, using methods developed by masters of their trade, the modern greats of total synthesis demonstrate that almost any molecule can be prepared given time and effort. |
Chemistry World July 17, 2013 Laura Howes |
Chemist found guilty of murder A chemist in the US has been found guilty of killing her husband with thallium obtained from the Bristol-Myers Squibb lab where she worked. |
Chemistry World July 17, 2013 Laura Howes |
Intelligent knife smokes out cancer All of the cancer needs to be excised, but surgeons want to remove as little healthy tissue as possible. That led Zoltan Takats at Imperial College London, UK, to wonder if mass spectrometry could help. |
Chemistry World July 16, 2013 Harriet Brewerton |
Accelerating stereochemical analysis A chemosensor has been developed by scientists in the US to speed up the quantitative stereochemical analysis of chiral amino alcohols and diamines. |
Chemistry World July 10, 2013 Iain Smellie |
Organic chemistry principles in context: a story telling historical approach Organic Chemistry Principles in Context by Mark Green joins a large selection of excellent textbooks currently available to organic chemistry students. |
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