Chemical technology news from across RSC Publishing.
Issue 9
September, 2006, Issue 9
Application Highlights

Revolution in oxygen storage catalysts
03 August 2006
Chemists in Japan have developed an oxygen storage system with almost ten times more capacity than the conventional materials used in automotive catalysts.

A complex issue
22 August 2006
Antimony leached from plastic bottles may form a novel citrate complex in citrus juices, which could affect its toxicity, report researchers in Greece.

Possibilities in protein patterning
24 August 2006
A protein patterning technique could help fight cancer, say US scientists.

Double breakthrough adds intensity to polymer
15 August 2006
A highly luminescent polymer film that glows bright blue in response to electric current has been developed by scientists in China.

Broadening the mass spectrum
01 August 2006
Canadian chemists have used ionic liquids to broaden the range of compounds that can be studied with mass spectrometry.

Liquid crystals on a chip
08 August 2006
Intelligent liquid crystals may soon be integral in lab-on-a-chip technology, according to researchers from the Netherlands and Canada.

Can ionic liquids stand the heat?
10 August 2006
Studying ionic liquids' thermal stability is important, claim chemists in Australia.

Lab on a chip overcomes splitting headache
18 August 2006
Researchers from the US have developed a microfluidic splitting technique for separating chemically distinct samples on the nanoscale.
Essential Elements
Sex, love and our chemical nature
A new book published by the RSC, Lust and Love: Is it more than chemistry? examines the age old questions of why people fall in love and what makes people attractive.
Molecular BioSystems in the spotlight
News that the National Library of Medicine has selected Molecular BioSystems, the RSC's chemical biology journal, for indexing and inclusion in their MEDLINE database brought the j...
Lab on a Chip and Corning Incorporated and are launching a new prize, called Pioneers in Miniaturisation, to encourage research at the micro- and nano-scale.
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Chemical Technology Issue 9 2006
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