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Chemistry World October 13, 2014 Tim Wogan |
Nanodiamonds add some sparkle to imaging Nanodiamonds are highly promising medical imaging contrast agents and drug delivery vehicles because of their low cytotoxicity. |
Chemistry World October 10, 2014 Katrina Kramer |
Smart bandage gives wound treatment the green light A group of researchers from the US, South Korea and Germany has developed a liquid bandage that can map oxygen concentrations in skin wounds and burns. |
Chemistry World October 10, 2014 Laura Fisher |
Dangling bonds induce ferromagnetism in graphitic carbon nitride Researchers have achieved ferromagnetism in graphitic carbon nitride, g-C 3N 4, by introducing hydrogen dangling bonds into its two-dimensional structure, making the material suitable for spintronic devices. |
Chemistry World October 7, 2014 |
Inventors of blue LED win physics Nobel The 2014 Nobel prize in physics has been awarded to Isamu Akasaki and Hiroshi Amano, of Nagoya University, Japan, and Shuji Nakamura of the University of California, Santa Barbara, US, for the invention of efficient blue light emitting diodes. |
Chemistry World October 7, 2014 Rebecca Trager |
Los Alamos lab's safety lapses faulted for radioactive leak A radioactive material leak that affected 22 workers and closed the US's only permanent nuclear waste repository was likely the result of a failure to follow safety procedures. |
Chemistry World October 3, 2014 Simon Hadlington |
Nanoscale microphone based on a single molecule Researchers in the Netherlands have created the world's tiniest microphone, in which the acoustic detector is a single molecule. |
Chemistry World October 2, 2014 Susannah May |
Oil reserves put under the microscope with new lab-on-a-rock Scientists in Canada have developed a new microfluidic model carved from rock, which can replicate the conditions found in underground oil reservoirs in a laboratory with more accuracy than ever before. |
Chemistry World October 1, 2014 Philip Ball |
Probing molecules atom by atom A new technique that can 'see' individual spins of electrons and nuclei in single molecules could enable nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy atom by atom. |
Chemistry World October 1, 2014 Katrina Kramer |
Microfluidics for the masses US scientists have developed a series of microfluidic building blocks that allow researchers to construct devices by assembling the components like Lego. |
Chemistry World September 30, 2014 Andy Extance |
Tiny tips reveal cells' chemical secrets US researchers have broken into individual living cells with inexpensive probes that can suck their contents directly into a mass spectrometer. |
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