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Chemistry World March 10, 2009 Alexander Hellemans |
Making pentagonal ice An international group of researchers have discovered that pentagonal structures of ice can be formed on copper surfaces consisting of Cu (110) substrates.  |
Chemistry World March 8, 2009 Nina Notman |
Polymer Crossroads Act as Tiny Reactors Scientists in the US have taken inspiration from a Dutch painter to create ultrasmall chemical reactors at the junctions of overlapping polymer nanofibres  |
Chemistry World March 3, 2009 Lewis Brindley |
Sweet-toothed bacteria make their own vaccine With careful feeding, bacteria can produce vaccines against themselves, scientists in the US and China have found.  |
Chemistry World March 1, 2009 Nina Notman |
Inorganic crystals turned into tubes Inorganic crystals dropped into water can be grown into long 'microtubes' of controlled size and shape, chemists in the UK have discovered.  |
Chemistry World March 2009 Emma Davies |
Fruits of the forest Last summer a team of UK scientists dragged the contents of their lab out into the jungle, to analyse the local atmosphere.  |
Chemistry World March 2009 Paul Docherty |
Column: Totally Synthetic Marine waters have produced some of the biggest celebrities of the natural product world - including the brevitoxins, saxitoxins and tetrodotoxins, 1 famous as much for the sheer human effort needed for their landmark syntheses as for their complexity and size.  |
Chemistry World March 2009 Philip Ball |
Column: The crucible Thermal motions on the molecular scale are not just useless noise  |
Chemistry World February 27, 2009 Hayley Birch |
More data from mixtures via NMR Finnish scientists have developed a new technique for separating out the NMR spectra of compounds in a mixture.  |
Chemistry World February 26, 2009 Nina Notman |
Analysis hints at solar energy alternatives Materials such as iron sulfide, copper sulfide and copper oxide could trump today's silicon solar cells in terms of cost, and in terms of rapid production at the scale needed for solar cells.  |
Chemistry World February 25, 2009 Victoria Gill |
Nano-regulation creeps closer Canada has introduced a mandatory safety reporting scheme for companies producing nanomaterials, becoming the first country in the world to do so.  |
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