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Chemistry World June 6, 2012 Catherine Pridmore |
Challenging the consensus on nanotube electrochemistry UK scientists have shown that the sidewalls and closed ends of carbon nanotubes can support fast electron transfer, challenging the belief that they are electrochemically inert.  |
Chemistry World June 5, 2012 Tamsin Phillips |
Targeting organs with therapeutic carbon monoxide Scientists in the US have created a gel that can be used to deliver therapeutic carbon monoxide gas to selected organs in the body.  |
Chemistry World June 5, 2012 |
California chemical committee controversy Before governor Jerry Brown cut her from California's Developmental and Reproductive Toxicant Identification Committee, La Donna Porter had been heavily criticized for appearing in an ad opposing state efforts to fund health research through a tax on cigarettes.  |
Chemistry World June 5, 2012 Simon Perks |
Chiral separation with micro-flows How do you separate enantiomers without any kind of chiral recognition between molecules? The answer it seems is to use asymmetric flow in a micro-fluidic channel.  |
Chemistry World June 5, 2012 Simon Cotton |
Chemists in locomotion Early Railway Chemistry and its Legacy by Colin Russell and John Hudson is reviewed.  |
Chemistry World June 1, 2012 Paul Docherty |
atrop-Abyssomicin C This member of the abyssomicin family is the only one to achieve bacteria-bashing prowess, and is also the only one to feature atropisomerism -- a relatively unusual form of stereoisomerism in naturally occurring species  |
Chemistry World June 1, 2012 Emma Shiells |
Electronic skin for health and security checks Scientists in the US have developed an electrochemical sensor incorporated into a temporary transfer tattoo to be used as a device to warn the wearer of any health or security threats.  |
Chemistry World June 1, 2012 Simon Hadlington |
Protein architecture with atomic precision Researchers have made a key breakthrough in designing and building geometrically defined nanostructures from proteins with unprecedented accuracy.  |
Chemistry World May 31, 2012 Phillip Broadwith |
Dyeing for a place in the sun It is clear that dye-sensitized solar cells are beginning to find their feet alongside their silicon cousins. The next few years will be exciting for both academic and industrial players  |
Chemistry World May 30, 2012 Phillip Broadwith |
Flerovium and Livermorium take seats at the periodic table The elements will take names that recognize the joint efforts of scientists in the US and Russia to provide unequivocal evidence of their synthesis.  |
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