A magazine highlighting the latest applications and technological aspects of research across the chemical sciences.
Issue 3
Advanced ceramics
Christian Schön and colleagues at the Max Planck Institute in Stuttgart, Germany, are making further progress in understanding how structure influences the properties of high-performance ceramics. Since atoms in amorphous materials have no regular arrangement in the way that crystals do it is difficult to work out how the molecules actually come together during synthesis, but computer modelling - essential for the proposal/validation of mechanisms - is producing results which may be valuable to the development of future tailored ceramics.
Arsenic and old crabs
Ulrik Nørum in Denmark and colleagues in Canada and Greece have identified the presence of arsenic in the blood of crabs for the first time, using chromatography and mass spectrometry. Their results show that arsenic in the diet of crabs is not fully metabolised. Little is known about what happens to arsenic once it is ingested or which organs process it. This research suggests a possible route for future investigation into the biotransformation pathways of arsenic compounds.
Green glycol solvents
Regulatory pressure is increasingly focusing on the use, manufacture, and disposal of organic solvents, and thus the development of non-hazardous alternatives. Jonathan Huddleston and colleagues at the University of Alabama discuss the potential for using polyethylene glycols, PEGs, as more benign solvents with uses as reaction mediums, phase transfer catalysts and in biphasic reactive extractions. PEGs are very well characterised both physically and toxicologically; an advantage over other more recently suggested green solvents.
Recycling 'sandwiches'
Paul Alsters and an interdisciplinary team from DSM Pharma Chemicals and the University of Twente, the Netherlands and the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, have developed a lipophilic polyoxometallate (POM) catalyst which can be separated from the organic reaction mixture via nanofiltration and then reused. This is achieved by retaining the POM within a robust ceramic membrane which is permeable to both reactants and products.
Essential Elements
Chemistry World Entrepreneur of the Year
David Haddleton, chemistry professor at Warwick University, has won the 2004 Chemistry World Entrepreneur of the year award.
RSC award for synthetic inorganic chemist
Christopher C. 'Kit' Cummins, chemistry professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has been awarded the inaugural Dalton Transactions lectureship.
Look out for the second in the series of ChemComm 40th Anniversary Articles, which is published this month
Application Highlights
A nozzle for easy introduction
Pneumatic nebuliser offers a much improved route for sample introduction
A first step to rapid anthrax detection in tap water has been made
Heart disease test within spitting distance
US researchers have come up with a novel microchip-based assay with the potential to help diagnose heart disease and associated inflammatory conditions.
A greener way to extract metal ions from water is being developed by US chemists.
Structuring electrolytes in solar cells
A new approach to improve the performance of electrolytes in dye-sensitised solar cells (DSSCs) has been developed by Japanese scientists.
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Chemical Technology 2005 issue 3
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