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Chemistry World November 2007 |
Software Reviews Pore-Cor network modeling suite... e-Learning Programs... Structural Design Suite... Relibase... Instant-JChem... ConturRDC... ChemBioOffice... KnowItAll U system... FlexX suite... Materials Studio...  |
Chemistry World November 2007 |
New on the Market Miniature spectrometers... Two-in-one x-ray... Magnetic nano-tags for molecules... Flexible gas chromatograph... Fluorimetry... Benchtop crystallography... X-ray diffraction... Particles fully described...  |
Chemistry World November 2007 Andrea Sella |
Classic Kit: Kipp's Apparatus For over 100 years the Kipp apparatus is still the simplest tool used to create gas.  |
Chemistry World October 30, 2007 James Mitchell Crow |
A Better Catalyst for Fuel Cells? Alloy nanoparticles that efficiently catalyse oxygen's conversion into water - the energy-releasing reaction that occurs in fuel cells - have been discovered. The particles are up to six times more active than pure platinum, the material typically used in current fuel cells.  |
Chemistry World October 30, 2007 Jayaraman Killugudi |
Glowing Future for Nanotubes A team of scientists from India and Japan have been the first to make a bundle of nanotubes glow, paving the way for their use as chemical sensors or in optoelectronics.  |
Chemistry World October 29, 2007 Simon Hadlington |
Forging Ahead of the Counterfeiters Scientists have demonstrated a suite of analytical techniques that can be used to distinguish genuine from fake antimalaria tablets. The problem of counterfeit drugs is growing in many parts of the world, posing a serious health risk.  |
Chemistry World October 29, 2007 Lewis Brindley |
Laser Hits the Right Spot for Chemical Analysis Scientists have developed a 'laser nanoantenna' that could significantly boost the level of detail available to tabletop microscopes.  |
Chemistry World October 26, 2007 Richard Van Noorden |
Proton NMR Spots Shape-Shifting Tablets UK scientists have extended the bounds of solid-state NMR to quickly solve a problem plaguing the pharmaceutical industry: how to spot unwanted crystal packing forms in a drug tablet.  |
Chemistry World October 25, 2007 |
Elusive Drug Target Finally Seen Scientists have captured an atomic-scale picture of a receptor protein from a family that is the target of thousands of drugs.  |
Chemistry World October 25, 2007 Jonathan Edwards |
Nanotube Gives Ultimate Force Measurement US researchers have pushed chemical force microscopy (CFM) to its ultimate limit by measuring the interaction of a single functional group with a carbon nanotube.  |
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