All Chemistry World articles in August 2023
View all stories from this issue.
-
News
Hungarian scientists left in the lurch as government’s battle with EU drags on
Backsliding on democratic principles led to Orbán’s government being suspended from EU research programmes
-
Opinion
Navigating the literature torrent
It’s humanly impossible to filter and read everything worthwhile – let’s embrace assistance
-
Business
Antibodies face Alzheimer’s reality
Companies are convincing regulators, but will doctors use them, and will providers pay for them?
-
Opinion
Deep sea mining is on hold, for now
But some countries say it will be essential to enable decarbonisation
-
Opinion
Letters: August 2023
Readers discuss the history of atoms, and ask for help treating a chronic eye condition
-
Research
Protein folding stability set to be unravelled on a massive scale
Technique can analyse a million protein sequences at a time to provide data for machine learning models
-
Research
Model solves mystery of unique chemical garden growth
Beautiful inorganic crystal formations modelled in step that could inform understanding of self-healing materials or even the origins of life
-
Research
Three simple steps to make the longest graphene nanoribbon ever
With 147 fused benzene rings and 920 conjugated atoms, the nanoribbon shows optoelectronic properties that could compete with quantum dots
-
Careers
Working through bereavement
Academic employers can do more to support grieving students and staff
-
Opinion
The heavy appeal of liquid metals
The shiny and dense fluids offer both ancient mystery and future promise
-
Feature
The liquid metals giving catalysis a new phase
They’re not like solid metals or like other liquids, but scientists are starting to understand and exploit them. James Mitchell Crow reports
-
Article
Mimicking our eyes’ sun protection
Sóliome is developing sunscreens based on natural UV-filtering peptides
-
Opinion
Whiteboards and napkins
How chemical intuition and guesses become the precise numbers of chemistry