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Chemistry World
April 15, 2010
Simon Hadlington
Lead joins the aromatic ring club Scientists in Japan have successfully incorporated an atom of lead into an aromatic molecule - the heaviest metal so far to be 'aromatised'. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 20, 2010
James Urquhart
Disilicate synthesis success A compound containing a stable silicon-silicon bond between two negatively charged pentacoordinated silicon atoms - silicates - has been synthesized and isolated for the first time by Japanese researchers. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
August 21, 2008
Fred Campbell
Double bonding with silicon In a landmark for silicon chemistry, US researchers have reported the first stable silicon (0) compound to contain a silicon-silicon double bond. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 9, 2011
Laura Howes
Zap and the Aromaticity is Gone German chemists have shown that it's possible to turn off aromaticity with a blast from a laser beam. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
October 9, 2014
Katrina Kramer
Largest Mobius molecule synthesized Researchers from Korea and Japan have put a new twist on aromaticity, synthesizing the largest Mobius aromatic molecule to date. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 28, 2015
Matthew Gunther
Purely inorganic aromatic ion synthesized Scientists in the US have successfully synthesized an aromatic ion made from only nitrogen and phosphorus. The anion is a rare example of a stable aromatic species containing no carbon atoms. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
August 14, 2012
Andy Extance
Carbon clusters score lucky seven US and Chinese chemists say that they've calculated the structure of a stable carbon dication that would have a higher coordination number than any yet seen experimentally. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 11, 2012
Simon Hadlington
'Nano-welding' taken to the limits as specific bonds are cut and formed In a remarkable demonstration of the extreme limits of nanoscale engineering, researchers from the US and China have used the tip of a scanning tunnelling microscope to cleave and form selected chemical bonds on a complex molecule. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 28, 2014
Simon Hadlington
Elusive sigma aromaticity captured Chemists in the US have created a unique transition metal hydride in which the hydrogens form a five-membered aromatic ring, something that had been theorized, but until now never seen. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 13, 2013
Philip Ball
The name's (quadruple) bond? The nature of C 2 is still imperfectly understood and has recently sparked extensive debate in the chemical literature. The question seems simple: how are the two atoms bonded? 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
Reactive Reports
Issue 54
David Bradley
Metals Take on Carbon's Bonding Characteristics A rethink about chemical bonding might be in the cards thanks to research that shows that the metal indium forms bonds in a manner not dissimilar to organic carbon atoms. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 28, 2011
Simon Hadlington
New method for aromatic coupling Chemists in Switzerland have developed a way to couple aromatic rings through the Friedel-Crafts mechanism - something many people would have believed impossible. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 2, 2015
Andy Extance
Chemists zinc up 'aromatic' metal cubes Researchers in China and the US have synthesized polyzinc clusters that have pushed back the boundaries of the kind of aromatic structures chemists can make. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 20, 2015
Andy Extance
Longer-lived oxides offer silicon synthesis boost Silicon and oxygen have been harnessed into previously unknown chemistry by US researchers, opening up a new 'world in a grain of sand'. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 18, 2014
Tim Wogan
New silicon allotrope could revolutionize solar cells A new, direct band gap allotrope of silicon has been synthesized by researchers in the US. It could potentially revolutionize solar cells and light-emitting devices. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 19, 2009
Manisha Lalloo
Copper catalysts give meta aromatics UK Researchers have discovered that, simply by using a copper catalyst, they are able to perform tricky substitution reactions at a difficult position on benzene rings mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 5, 2007
Richard Van Noorden
Desperately Seeking Silicon Silicon has been blamed for the faulty fuel that caused thousands of UK cars to break down last week. How can a silvery-gray semi-metal popularly known to be used in computer chips have found its way into gasoline? mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 18, 2015
Tim Wogan
Shining a light on amine synthesis A new method for site selective amination of aromatic organic compounds has been developed by researchers in the US. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 24, 2010
Andy Extance
Boron cluster forms unique ring system Clusters of nineteen boron atoms gather together in a ring structure unlike any other seen, with two planar -bonded aromatic systems nestled inside one another. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 28, 2015
Rubriflordilactone A It's likely that organic chemists have been practicing retrosynthesis in one form or another for at least a century, and certainly for decades before E J Corey formalized the concept in the mid-1990s mark for My Articles similar articles
Reactive Reports
Issue 37
David Bradley
Chemists Hail a New Antioxidant A new family of antioxidants that are 100 times more effective than Vitamin E could be used at much smaller doses in dietary supplements and cosmetics but provide the same benefits. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 6, 2006
Michael Gross
Insecticide Simplified A rapid, flexible way to make variants of potent insecticide molecules known as spinosyns could help to combat the growing problem of insect resistance, according to German chemists. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
December 15, 2010
Hayley Birch
New technique probes electron properties of individual atoms A new, low voltage electron microscopy technique allows scientists to discriminate not just between atoms of different elements but between atoms of the same element in different electronic states. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
September 23, 2010
Oliver Staley
Innovator: Walt de Herr Smaller, power-hungry processors push the limits of silicon. Physicist Walt de Heer thinks nanotechnology can provide a solution. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 29, 2015
Santiago Alvarez
What we mean when we talk about bonds The chemical bond is still a matter of lively debate among chemists, even a century after Gilbert Lewis introduced his electron pair bonding concept. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 24, 2007
James Mitchell Crow
Palladium Coupling in Fewer Steps Look out Suzuki - Canadian chemists have successfully joined up simple benzene ring-like aromatics without any pre-activation. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 7, 2007
Lionel Milgrom
Diatoms Transformed Into Silicon Sensors Materials scientists have found a simple method of converting frustules - the intricate silica-based skeletons of common single celled photosynthetic organisms called diatoms - into pure silicon structures with many applications. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 7, 2014
Jennifer Newton
Buckyball boron Systematic structure-searching calculations performed by scientists in China have put forward an all-boron analogue of fullerene: B 38. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 6, 2007
Tom Westgate
Probe Maps Individual Atoms in Semiconductor Troublesome clusters of dopant atoms have been 'seen' for the first time. Researchers have drawn up the first 3D maps of the individual atoms in a semiconductor. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 21, 2007
Richard Van Noorden
Forcing a Reaction US chemists have forced molecules to react by ripping their bonds apart with ultrasound. The scientists carefully stretched one targeted bond until it snapped, guiding the molecule's subsequent reaction into pathways forbidden by conventional chemistry. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
February 14, 2010
Simon Hadlington
Efficient solar cells from silicon wires US researchers have designed a new silicon-based solar cell which uses 100 times less silicon than conventional photovoltaic devices. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 19, 2014
Hayley Simon
Dragonfly crystals on a silicon wafer Individual, dragonfly-shaped crystals have been grown on the surface of a silicon wafer dipped slowly into a solution of dotriacontane -- a 32 carbon alkane. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
October 15, 2015
Victoria Richards
C 50 breaks all the rules European scientists have found that the rules of aromaticity need to be rewritten if they are to ever discover a superaromatic fullerene. mark for My Articles similar articles
Popular Mechanics
December 20, 2007
Logan Ward
New Nanowire Battery Life Reaches From iPods to Electric Cars Lithium-ion batteries that power most devices may soon be able to hold 10 times as much power. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 26, 2012
David Bradley
Spotting silicon in graphene, it's dope A combination of scanning transmission electron microscopy and atomic-resolution spectroscopic techniques has allowed US researchers to pick out individual silicon atoms in a doped graphene sheet. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 16, 2015
Jenny Lovell
Alkyne insertion imparts silicon stereochemistry Scientists in Japan have reported a way of inserting alkynes into carbon -- silicon bonds, also known as alkynylsilylation, that creates silicon stereogenic centers with high enantioselectivity. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
December 1, 2004
Kimberly Patch
Solar Cell Doubles as Battery Scientists have designed a single, compact device that can both convert solar energy to electricity and store the electricity. mark for My Articles similar articles
Scientific American
August 2005
Steven Ashley
Making Light of Silicon Scientists at UCLA and Intel have obtained coherent photons of light from silicon. This low cost alternative to "exotic" semiconductor materials currently used as lasers will pave the way for many technological advances. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 2, 2012
Philip Ball
Imaging icons To celebrate the London 2012 Olympics, David Fox and Anish Mistry at the University of Warwick, UK, synthesised olympicene -- a polyaromatic hydrocarbon of five fused rings. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
October 2007
Philip Ball
The Crucible Feel free to make photovoltaics better. But don't forget they have to be cheaper, too. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
December 1, 2004
Eric Smalley
Pure Silicon Laser Debuts Researchers have made a prototype laser from silicon. The laser is tunable, meaning it can lase in a range of wavelengths, or colors, and it works at room temperature. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
January 12, 2005
Silicon Surfaces Speed Circuits Researchers have devised a way to use the chemistry of silicon surfaces to make smaller chip features. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
March 9, 2005
Silicon Chip Laser Goes Continuous Useful lasers made from silicon would make it possible to move data between and within computer chips using light rather than electricity. This would make for faster chips that could be more tightly integrated with optical communications equipment. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 8, 2011
Mike Brown
Pi-stacking better without the aromatics? Scientists in the US have discovered that electrons confined to their double bonds can sometimes deliver stronger pi-stacking interactions than those roaming free in aromatic systems. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
November 2003
Lisa Corathers
Mineral Resource of the Month: Silicon The Silicon Commodity Specialist for the U.S. Geological Survey has compiled this information about silicon, an extremely versatile mineral with many applications in the manufacture of iron and steel, aluminum alloys, chemicals, and electronic microchips. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 2012
Column: In the pipeline Drug discovery requires experimentation, says Derek Lowe. But chemists can be reluctant to stray from the elements they know and love mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
April 2007
Gurnett & Adams
Merging the Functionalities of Silicon, and III-Vs: Two Promising Approaches One of the least flexible rules in electronic design is the need to keep silicon devices, and compound semiconductor devices separate. Two new developments are now threatening to make this rule partly or entirely obsolete. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
October 2005
Salvatore Coffa
Light From Silicon For decades, silicon was a semiconducting dim bulb, but now we can make it into LEDs that match the best made from more exotic materials mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
September 8, 2004
Pure Crystal Promises Hardy Chips Silicon carbide is hardier than than the plain silicon most computer chips are made from, and so theoretically could be a useful material for computer chips that must withstand extreme environments and high-power applications. mark for My Articles similar articles