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Chemistry World February 2, 2015 Tim Wogan |
LEDs slim down with atom thick materials Heterostructures containing mixtures of atom thick layers have been used to create LEDs |
Chemistry World February 2, 2015 Megan Tyler |
Shock tactics for drug delivery Scientists in India have developed a shock wave-based drug delivery system that could be used to administer insulin in diabetic patients and reduce the need for painful injections. |
Chemistry World January 30, 2015 Debbie Houghton |
Thin film approach to biocatalysis Taking an unconventional approach to biocatalysis has allowed scientists in Italy to improve enzyme recycling ability with a solvent-free reaction mixture |
Chemistry World January 30, 2015 Anisha Ratan |
A sticky way to inspect self-cleaning glass Reusable color-changing sticky labels that act as a cheap and easy way to check the activity of photocatalysis-based self-cleaning glass have been designed by scientists in the UK. |
Chemistry World January 30, 2015 Andrea Sella |
Landriani's eudiometer Marsilio Landriani was an Italian scientist (1751 -- 1815), who investigated gases and invented the eudiometer |
Chemistry World January 29, 2015 Emma Stoye |
Chemistry Nobel laureate Yves Chauvin dies aged 84 Chauvin received the prize for his contribution to organic synthesis, providing a detailed mechanism for how metathesis reactions are catalyzed. |
Chemistry World January 29, 2015 Jennifer Newton |
Graphene looks to doped superbenzene to overcome electronic hurdles Building graphene from carefully-modified superbenzene segments has been proposed as a way to help graphene overcome a major stumbling block limiting its application in electronic devices. |
Chemistry World January 29, 2015 Santiago Alvarez |
What we mean when we talk about bonds The chemical bond is still a matter of lively debate among chemists, even a century after Gilbert Lewis introduced his electron pair bonding concept. |
Chemistry World January 28, 2015 Emma Stoye |
Live insects pictured with electron microscope Takahiko Hariyama's group at Hamamatsu University in Japan had developed a coating that allowed insect larvae to survive in the vacuum chamber of a scanning electron microscope, enabling whole living creatures to be imaged at very high resolution. |
Chemistry World January 28, 2015 Rebecca Trager |
Ex-US Navy weapons specialist arrested over chemical stockpile An American ophthalmologist, who reportedly worked with chemical weapons during his former stint with the US Navy, was arrested in Ottawa, Canada, on 21 January for stockpiling dangerous chemicals. |
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