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Chemistry World November 2011 Philip Ball |
Column: The Crucible Growing graphene by CVD might benefit from an initial injection of hexagonality to start off on the right footing.  |
Chemistry World November 2011 Paul Docherty |
Column: Totally Synthetic Gelsemoxonine has an extra four-membered azetidine ring, making for a considerable synthetic challenge.  |
Chemistry World November 2011 Derek Lowe |
Column: In the Pipeline In recent years there's another class of 'unknown' compounds that's become more prominent than ever: the ones you can buy from the chemical catalogues.  |
Chemistry World November 2011 Graeme Armstrong |
Good Chemistry We must improve the chemistry between industry and society.  |
IEEE Spectrum November 2011 Dave Levitan |
Prospects for an Artificial Leaf Are Growing Scientists design artificial photosynthesis devices that could make hydrogen or other fuels  |
Chemistry World October 31, 2011 Phillip Broadwith |
Pee-powered fuel cell turns urine to energy Urine-powered fuel cells could generate electricity and reclaim essential nutrients directly from human and animal waste, say UK scientists.  |
Chemistry World October 31, 2011 Jon Cartwright |
Organic LEDs set to become displays' flexible friend Researchers in Canada have created organic light-emitting diodes on flexible plastic substrates that retain the high efficiency of their non-flexible counterparts.  |
Chemistry World October 31, 2011 Simon Hadlington |
The kilogram is dead! Long live the kilogram! Delegates at the 24th Conference on Weights and Measures, held in France on 21 October, were persuaded that the existing definitions of these units were outdated and needed to be dragged into the 21st century.  |
Chemistry World October 28, 2011 Laura Howes |
Clicking Your Way to Synthetic Antibody Therapies Scientists have clicked together synthetic antibodies using the enzymes they want to target as a template. These synthetic antibodies can then be used to bind to the enzyme templates they were cast from, which could open up a whole new field of therapeutic molecules.  |
Chemistry World October 27, 2011 Carl Saxton |
Graphene and Zeolite Team up for Catalysis Scientists have incorporated graphene into zeolites to increase their photocatalytic activity for applications such as water and air purification, dye degradation and self-cleaning and anti-bacterial surfaces.  |
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