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Chemistry World
June 2008
Philip Ball
The Crucible By investigating how far a carbon vertex can be bent before it spontaneously flies apart, chemists can gain some understanding of the parameters within which such frameworks must operate. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
February 21, 2007
Tom Westgate
Complex Organic Molecules Teamed with Iodine Chemists have developed a method for constructing complex halogen-containing organic molecules from simple compounds in a single step. The discovery could pave the way for the synthesis of many potentially useful naturally occurring molecules. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 24, 2009
Phillip Broadwith
Carbon can't but tin can US chemists have discovered that distannynes - tin-based analogues of acetylenes - can react reversibly with ethene to make cyclic complexes. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 3, 2008
Simon Hadlington
Organic synthesis set for auto-pilot Peptides are routinely made by machines that couple together amino acid components. Could organic synthesis ever get this simple? mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 1, 2007
Richard Van Noorden
Step Change for Organic Synthesis US chemists discovered how to attack a complex molecule's unreactive carbon-hydrogen bonds, without resorting to wasteful synthetic aids like protecting and directing groups. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 13, 2015
Philip Ball
First snapshot of elusive intermediate supplies surprise A team near Zurich in Switzerland, has been able to take a single-molecule snapshot of an intermediate in a common class of organic reactions. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 29, 2015
Derek Lowe
Magic molecule modifiers The synthesis of a new organic molecule can be approached in several ways. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 9, 2006
Katharine Sanderson
Covalent Bonds Crack Under the Strain Chemists must consider engineering principles when designing molecules following news that tough carbon-to-carbon bonds break easily under mechanical strain. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 28, 2013
Put the chemistry back in medicinal chemistry Today, synthetic skill is valued and appreciated much less in medicinal chemistry than in chemical development, though it is equally important for both. Much of the blame lies with the mismeasurement of productivity. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 5, 2007
Ned Stafford
Joining up Nanocircuits A team of scientists have covalently bonded strings of porphyrin molecules on a gold surface -- a step forward in the quest to develop nano-electronics. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 14, 2011
Simon Hadlington
World's Longest Carbon-Carbon Bond Created Harnessing both attractive and repulsive forces enabled chemists to make a carbon-carbon bond 30 per cent long than normal. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 31, 2008
Nanostructures Made Easy Scotland-based chemists have invented a new way to build nanoscale arrays of molecules over a large surface area: a technique that may be key to making nanostructures in sophisticated sensors, catalysts, and tiny computer parts. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 2012
Lead-oriented synthesis Ian Churcher and Alan Nadin call for the development of more robust synthetic tools to improve small molecule survival rates in the perilous journey from lead to drug mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 13, 2006
Jon Evans
Chemists Bring Alien Molecule Down to Earth Chemists have recreated an alien molecule in the laboratory by synthesising a stable version of the carbene cyclopropenylidene. Cyclopropenylidene was first detected by radio astronomers in 1985, and is now the most abundant cyclic hydrocarbon observed in interstellar space. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
June 29, 2005
Self-assembly: the natural way to make things In biology, there are a few different ways DNA molecules can be replicated and combined. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 19, 2010
Simon Hadlington
New 'click' reaction to modify proteins Chemists in the US have discovered a new way to attach small molecules to proteins and peptides under mild, aqueous reaction conditions. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
June 2008
Sarah Houlton
Breaking the rules The author finds out about some chemical tricks that can give a new drug the best possible odds of success mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
December 9, 2013
Jessica Cocker
Hydrogen breaks strong bonds with brute force A method developed by Leo Lau of Western University in Canada and colleagues can break C -- H bonds without damaging the rest of the molecule. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
February 27, 2009
Hayley Birch
More data from mixtures via NMR Finnish scientists have developed a new technique for separating out the NMR spectra of compounds in a mixture. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 9, 2012
Phillip Broadwith
'Molecular cobra' turns C-H to C=C A reagent developed by US chemists can selectively introduce synthetically useful C=C double bonds into unactivated carbon chains, guided by an activating group attached to a nearby oxygen or nitrogen atom. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 31, 2009
Lewis Brindley
Giving molecules a stretch A simple way to stretch small molecules and measure the forces at play has been developed by researchers in the US. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
Erin Biba
Molecular Frameworks, the Building Blocks of All Life The world is complicated, but not as complicated as you might think. Most organic molecules derive from a few relatively simple architectures. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 16, 2006
Jon Evans
Buckyballs Worth Their Weight in Gold A team of chemists and physicists has uncovered evidence for the existence of hollow buckyball-like cages made of gold. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reactive Reports
David Bradley
Subjective Suboxide Carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide are probably the best known molecules containing just carbon and oxygen, but they do form others, such as carbon suboxide (C3O2), which is one of the most stable. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
August 30, 2007
James Mitchell Crow
Toxins' Synthesis Secret Cracked US chemists have discovered that using water instead of organic solvents is the key to understanding how algae make toxins called ladder polyethers. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 21, 2007
Alison Stoddart
Synthesis Strategy Offers no Protection A radically different approach to constructing complex molecules could help to tap the pharmaceutical potential of natural products. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
October 28, 2015
Philip Ball
Speaking of chemistry There were some inevitable names among the candidates for Chemistry World's 'quotable chemistry' competition, including that of Richard Feynman, a less predictable candidate. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 20, 2012
Jon Evans
World's smallest ice cube created Ice crystals must contain at least 275 water molecules, say German chemists. This size limit has implications for any process that involves ice particles, from cloud formation to making the perfect gin and tonic. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 31, 2009
Nina Notman
The natural approach to winning at drug discovery High throughput drug screening is often described as a casino, with the odds stacked on the side of success as long as a big enough library is used. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 22, 2008
Richard Van Noorden
Xenon doubled up with water Creating a water molecule with two noble gas atoms interpolated into its structure sounds an improbable feat, but a international team of researchers now claim to have trapped just such an exotic compound in xenon. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reactive Reports
Issue 63
David Bradley
Natural Copy Cat While plants convert carbon dioxide into sugar and oxygen, chemists are having a more difficult time finding an efficient method for converting carbon dioxide into useful fuels. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 19, 2010
Phillip Broadwith
Designing porous patterns Belgian chemists are finally getting to grips with how to control the way molecules arrange themselves at the solid-liquid interface. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 30, 2012
Jon Cartwright
Tiny buckyball grown around metal atom An international team of researchers has observed the smallest fullerene to form spontaneously to date using metal atoms for stabilization. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 3, 2010
Jon Cartwright
Hydrocarbon turns superconductor Researchers in Japan have created the first superconducting material based on a molecule of carbon and hydrogen atoms. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
October 29, 2014
Lycopodium alkaloids Not all natural products are created equal. A glance at the total synthesis literature from the past decade is enough to discover that some molecules attract a lot more attention than others. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 24, 2011
Phillip Broadwith
Rewriting the rules for polar molecules A molecule containing two atoms of the same element can have a permanent electric dipole, say US and German scientists, contradicting the traditional view of molecular polarity. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
March 23, 2005
Nanowires track molecular activity Researchers from Harvard University have found a way to use transistors made from silicon nanowires to gain information about how small molecules bind to proteins. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 2010
Carbon Couplers Take the Prize Three giants of organic chemistry, who pioneered palladium-catalysed cross coupling reactions, have shared this year's Nobel prize. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 24, 2014
Hayley Simon
Water provides new angle on single molecule imaging Small variations in a molecule's conformation can have a large effect on chemical reactivity. Being able to identify these differences is one of the aims of high resolution spectroscopy. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
August 1, 2010
Mike Brown
Snapshots of mystery molecular structures Researchers have used atomic force microscopy to produce clear molecular images that can help determine the correct atomic structure of unknown organic molecules. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
October 27, 2006
Richard Van Noorden
Synthetic Origami Folds Like Natural Enzymes Researchers have synthesised a large organic molecule that folds up like a small protein, though its backbone is entirely non-biological. The achievement is a step along the path to producing truly synthetic enzymes in the laboratory. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
June 2, 2004
Buckyballs Gain Smaller Kin Researchers from Xiamen University and the Chinese Academy of Sciences have constructed a smaller version of the buckyball or C60 fullerene molecule, a spherical cage of carbon atoms. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
June 12, 2013
Kirsty Muirhead
An end to chasing molecules that were never there? Ariel Sarotti from the Rosario National University, Argentina, has developed a new, computationally inexpensive method combining calculated and experimental 13C NMR data to flag up incorrect structures. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 9, 2007
Michael Gross
Nanowires go Round the Bend Chemists have bent an apparently linear molecular wire into a closed circle, creating a conducting ring just 3 nanometers across. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
October 2009
Column: In the pipeline Derek Lowe discusses the problem of leaning too heavily on favorite reactions mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 14, 2011
Simon Hadlington
Natural Products Made Via a Single Parent Molecule Chemists in the US have taken inspiration from nature to devise a new concept for rapidly and efficiently synthesising structurally diverse natural products from a single common precursor. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
June 5, 2006
Simon Hadlington
The Attraction of Gold for Gold Researchers are unravelling some of the fundamental chemistry surrounding a key but poorly understood aspect of the coordination chemistry of gold -- the weak `aurophilic' interactions between adjacent atoms of Au(I) in organic complexes. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
October 12, 2011
Joanne Thomson
Hot Chemistry Temperature played a crucial role in David MacMillan's decision to study chemistry. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reactive Reports
September 2007
David Bradley
Insecticidal Synthesis The efforts of 40 PhD chemistry students and many others have found a way to construct azadirachtin -- a natural insecticide from the neem tree -- in a total synthesis of 64 individual chemical reaction steps. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 3, 2014
Tami Spector
Of atoms and aesthetics Molecular aesthetics means many things to a few people. For some it means tangible aspects of compounds; for others yet, the ways that chemists represent molecules. mark for My Articles similar articles