All Chemistry World articles in November 2016
View all stories from this issue.
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BusinessChemours reaches truce in pollution investigation
Company will provide authorities with data on perfluorinated compound emissions into drinking water
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OpinionDo chemists spend enough time in the lab?
The secret to a career in academia could be finding the right work–work balance
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ReviewCrime scene to court: the essentials of forensic science (fourth edition)
Samantha Drake uncovers new truths in a revised text
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OpinionWe need more women to win the Nobel prize
How to improve the gender balance in science’s most prestigious award
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OpinionLetters: November 2016
Your opinions about the new-look Chemistry World and how to aid refugee scientists
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OpinionWhy bubbles transform our meals
Manipulating gases can improve baking and create fizzy treats
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CareersThe security specialists
Kabrena Rodda and Laura Denlinger talk about training Iraqi scientists in chemical safety and security
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PuzzleNovember 2016 puzzles
Download the puzzles from the November 2016 print issue of Chemistry World
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OpinionRegulatory tightropes
When lobbying and marketing clash with scientific evidence, regulators walk a fine line
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OpinionPutting chemistry back in biology
The chemical nature of biomolecular interactions can no longer be ignored
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ReviewThe gene: an intimate history
Jamie Durrani looks at a Pulitzer prize winner’s take on genetics
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OpinionShould chemistry degrees require A-level maths?
Requiring a maths qualification could deprive the profession of fresh talent
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FeatureSmarter smells
After years of research, the flavour and fragrance industry is increasingly turning to biotechnology for commercial production, as Emma Davies reports
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NewsPfizer launches new biosimilar drug in US
Autoimmune disease treatment becomes only the second biosimilar to be approved by the FDA
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OpinionTime to revolt against impact factors
Perverse incentives hurt science – the top universities need to fight back
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FeatureSeparating the guilty and the innocent
Chromatography is one of the key weapons in the forensic scientist’s arsenal, as Clare Sansom discovers