| Old Articles: <Older 1171-1180 Newer> |
 |
Chemistry World January 8, 2009 Hayley Birch |
Nanotubes promise electronic inks A new chemical process may help overcome one of the main obstacles to using carbon nanotubes in electronics  |
Chemistry World January 8, 2009 Victoria Gill |
Breast cancer drug target crystallised The crystal structure of human aromatase, an enzyme that is a key drug target for treating breast cancer, has been solved by US scientists.  |
Chemistry World January 7, 2009 James Mitchell Crow |
UK chemists force funding compromise More young chemists in the UK look set to receive government grants after the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) bowed to pressure from the chemistry community to spread its early career funding more widely.  |
Chemistry World January 6, 2009 Rebecca Trager |
Web chemistry progresses InChI by InChI InChIs enable people to look up and find information on a particular chemical very quickly  |
Chemistry World January 5, 2009 Hayley Birch |
How to Strengthen the Taste of Umami US scientists say they have uncovered a unique mechanism by which molecules drastically enhance umami flavour - the savoury taste associated with protein-rich foods such as meat, cheese and seafood.  |
IEEE Spectrum January 2009 Prachi Patel-Predd |
The Trouble With Touch Screens Scientists search for a replacement for indium-tin oxide, a transparent conductor that's vanishing fast.  |
Popular Mechanics December 30, 2008 Jeremy Jacquot |
Can a Kind of Ancient Charcoal Put the Brakes on Global Warming? Biochar was first created and used thousands of years ago to help plants grow. Nine countries are now pouring research dollars into the substance to see if it can sequester carbon, improve the soil and produce biofuels all at once.  |
Popular Mechanics December 29, 2008 Jeremy Jacquot |
3 Projects We Hope to See From the DOE's Next Nuclear Research Facility Studying rare nuclear isotopes with unstable, short-lived nuclei has plenty of practical and commendable applications in medicine, national security, and cosmology.  |
Chemistry World December 23, 2008 Tom Westgate |
Gallium and uranium join forces A molecule featuring the first ever uranium-gallium bond may shed light on how related carbene ligands selectively extract uranium from lanthanides  |
Chemistry World December 22, 2008 Hayley Birch |
Looking at life label-free US scientists have demonstrated a way to sensitively track molecules in living cells without attaching bulky labels or staining a sample.  |
| <Older 1171-1180 Newer> Return to current articles. |