July 2006
Vol 3, No 7
News and analysis

Back in time for CW reporter
22 May 2006
Familiar face returns Robert Hooke's long-lost notes to the Royal Society in London

Museum paints the town purple
01 June 2006
Museum visitors in Manchester, UK are spending the half-term holiday covered in purple dye and getting to grips with the chemical industry

Whooping and dancing for chemistry godfather
07 June 2006
Manchester chemist has been awarded the first honorary DSc degree from the University of Zululand.

Cash injection for zeolite crystal growth
29 May 2006
A fundamental study into crystal growth has grabbed the attention of global industrial oil companies.

The attraction of gold for gold
05 June 2006
Weak gold-gold interactions in organic complexes affect the systems' emission spectra and could lead to a new type of sensor.

Budget shortfall threatens FP7
23 May 2006
EU research investment from 2007 to 2013 will fall €20 billion short of previous agreements.

Google Chmoogle
02 June 2006
A new chemistry search engine has been forced to change its name following pressure from the search engine Google

Explosion at ammonia plant
01 June 2006
An explosion at an ammonia plant has left two people injured in Teesside, UK

Brazil and UK team up
23 May 2006
Brazil is 'ready and mature' to join the international science arena, according to the Brazilian science minister
News briefs
Short items
Incorrect
Industry news
Funding briefs
Short items
New on the market
New products - July 2006
In the papers...
Short items
Chemical Science

New twists on catalysis
01 June 2006
Chemists around the world have discovered several new twists to improve the performance of asymmetric catalysts in hydrogenation reactions

Axons get directions
02 June 2006
Scientists are a step closer to understanding the processes that control the growth and spread of nerve cells

Size matters in cloud formation
02 June 2006
Scientists grappling to understand the effect of man-made aerosols on cloud formation have decided that particle size, rather than chemistry, is the main factor

The Invisible Man made real
26 May 2006
Cloaks that make objects invisible will be made within 18 months, say UK and US scientists.

Making light work for ionic liquids
08 June 2006
Solar cells using ionic liquids as electrolytes are a step closer, thanks to an efficient organogelator developed by European scientists.

Identifying contamination in the groundwater
27 June 2006
US geochemists have developed a technique for identifying sources of groundwater contamination.

Sulfur removal fuels fuel cell future
09 June 2006
Materials that prevent sulfur-poisoning of fuel cells working at high temperatures have been developed.

Electric shock for controlled release
25 May 2006
US researchers have improved the method for controlled release of biomolecules using gold electrodes.

A physiological role for healthy prions
30 May 2006
The healthy version of the scrapie pathogen helps regulate intracellular copper ion levels.

Carbon joins the dots
31 May 2006
Carbon could soon replace cadmium as the material of choice for quantum dots, claim scientists in the US

Supramolecular chemistry silences genes
13 June 2006
Dendrimers can be used to switch off specific genes, say chemists in France and China.

Blood cell role in diabetes complications
15 June 2006
Red blood cells are much more than just transporters of oxygen, say US chemists.

Radiation-proof solvents for the nuclear industry
06 June 2006
Ionic liquids can withstand high doses of gamma radiation, and could be used to process nuclear fuels, say chemists in France.

New stamping ground for DNA arrays
14 June 2006
DNA microarrays for detecting genetic diseases will be easier and cheaper to produce thanks to scientists in the US.

Sacrificial surfaces give up their iron
27 June 2006
Active solid-metal surfaces offer a new route to multi-nuclear mixed metal complexes, claim scientists in Finland.

Solubility switching of carbon nanotubes
15 June 2006
Researchers in China have discovered a way to change the solubility of carbon nanotubes, creating diverse biological applications.
Features

Insect detectives
The powerful sense of smell that insects possess is being put to use in applications from detecting rotten tomatoes to controlling one of the deadliest of diseases in Africa. John ...

Working towards a one-stop shop
Acquiring companies across Europe, the US and Japan has given Biotage an enviable range of products and services, coupled with a challenging cultural mix, reports Bea Perks.

100 years of the FDA
The 1906 pure food and drug act was set up to protect US citizens from unregulated and potentially harmful products. Implementing the regulation has presented the US Food and Drug ...

Biosensors make it big
The biosensor market is expanding rapidly but many new and innovative biosensors will probably never make it to market, reports Jon Evans.

Chemical origami
Sensors with molecular probes that fold around their targets, in combination with electrochemical detection, are being heralded as the ultimate user-friendly 'just add sample' devi...
Regulars

Comment: An accidental chemist as RSC president
Jim Feast describes himself as a dreamer, but is keen to put his dreams into practice at the RSC
Your views...
What, if anything, do chemistry and the arts have in common?

Careers: Work, rest and play
A thirst for new challenges led chemist Marek Klunduk into a scientific career with the petfood division of Mars.
Crossword and Su Doku
Prize crossword and Su Doku, July 2006
The last retort: Flying the flag
From a scientific point of view it's fair to say that currently it's the biochemistry of metatarsal healing that exercises most England fans' concerns
Flashback
July - 10 years ago; 85 years ago; 100 years ago; 195 years ago; 210 years ago
Chemistry World Letters, July 2006
Chemistry World Reviews, July 2006

