March 2006
Vol 3, no.3
News and analysis

Science minister stands by predictions on China and India
26 January 2006
UK Science minister Lord Sainsbury says rapid development in China based on cheap labour, not superior Chinese science.

Sparks fly over jet processing of cells
24 January 2006
The latest publication on jet processing of living cells has revealed a highly competitive research field.

Information free-for-all
24 February 2006
Could the online encyclopaedia Wikipedia could become the main source of chemical information in 5-10 years?

UK considers nuclear option
24 January 2006
The UK government yesterday launched a major consultation to determine energy generation for the next 50 years.

Stark warning for science education
27 January 2006
The first statistical analysis of UK school science teaching in a decade highlights serious gaps in the physical sciences.

Update: Europe gets hot and bothered over sun cream labelling
22 February 2006
EU ministers agree that rules on exposure to solar radiation should be left to national governments.

Calls for UK investment in carbon capture
09 February 2006
The UK government must invest immediately in carbon capture and storage technologies to meet carbon emissions targets.

MEPs take a dip at Europe's water resorts
25 January 2006
The European Parliament has updated its 30-year old Bathing Water Directive, to protect swimmers and water-sports enthusiasts

Dietary needs outweigh risks associated with fish consumption
20 February 2006
The benefits of a diet rich in fish outweigh possible risks of mercury poisoning.

Lessons for carbon negative fuel production in the Amazon
20 February 2006
Dark, nutrient rich, Amazonian soil could hold the key to reducing carbon emissions.
Business roundup
Industry news
Funding briefs
Short items
Chemical Science

Sniffing out garlic in gilded artworks
24 January 2006
The presence of garlic in early gilded artworks has been confirmed.

Crystal structures of bubbles
08 February 2006
Researchers have used household detergent to create, for the first time, arrays of bubbles that mirror the atomic arrays found in crystals.

To boldly go where no chemist has gone before
08 February 2006
Studying the interactions between different molecular fragments is taking researchers to the uncharted regions of chemical space.

Head-to-tail monomers improve solar cell efficiency
06 February 2006
British and South Korean researchers have improved the efficiency of polymer-based solar cells.

Pharmaceutical promise in the desert
15 February 2006
Two molecules that inhibit a protein linked to cancer pathogenesis have been discovered in the Arizona desert.

Hydrophobic coatings with atmospheric plasma
21 February 2006
Chemical engineers have developed a practical atmospheric plasma treatment process for depositing stable hydrophobic coatings on a range of materials.

Eurozone researchers see through fake banknotes
23 January 2006
Fake euro notes can be detected quickly and accurately with a spectroscopic technique.

Gene delivery with dendrimers
24 February 2006
Dendritic molecules developed as gene carriers show potential for cancer therapy.

Highly enantioselective DNA-based catalysis
02 February 2006
DNA-based catalysts show great potential for asymmetric catalysis, say researchers in the Netherlands.

High throughput screening for kinase inhibitors
03 February 2006
A colorimetric assay for kinase activity based on the aggregation of gold nanoparticles.

Researchers put bioenergetics into biomagnification
02 February 2006
Mathematical model could predict how industrial pollutants accumulate in different animal species.

Chiral catalysis on a chip
01 February 2006
Chiral catalysis and analytical separation of the resulting enantiomers can now be performed on a single chip.

New steroid forms molecular zipper
07 February 2006
Naturally occurring steroid that acts as a supramolecular zipper could have potential as a new anticancer drug.

Breakthrough in trace detection of peroxide explosives
13 February 2006
US researchers have developed a quick and sensitive method that could soon be used at airports around the world for detecting peroxide explosives on ordinary surfaces.
Silicon conducts an electrical surprise
09 February 2006
Silicon can conduct electricity when experts assumed it couldn't, sparking a surprising direction in silicon electronics.

Ringing the changes to combat cancer
21 February 2006
A new class of targeted anticancer drugs could soon be developed based on cyclic macromolecules that selectively bind four stranded DNA structures.

Microfluidic devices with heart
09 February 2006
Japanese researchers have harnessed the pumping power of heart cells to make better microfluidic devices.

Medical future for tiny quantum dots
10 February 2006
US researchers have crossed a milestone in biological imaging by developing quantum dots small enough to pass from the blood stream into bodily tissue.

Storing up high hopes for hydrogen economy
13 February 2006
Polymer scientists have joined the race to store hydrogen as fuel.

Rapid reactions using microfluidic devices
24 January 2006
A glass microchip has been used for the first time to carry out fast carbonylative cross-coupling reactions of arylhalides to form secondary amides.

Tracing elements to find hit-and-run vehicles
20 February 2006
An improved spectroscopic method for the forensic analysis of car paint fragments has been demonstrated by analytical chemists from Belgium and Switzerland.

Nanoparticles detect cell suicide plans
13 February 2006
Nanotechnological assay for detecting programmed cell death.

Novel receptor for ion-pairs
10 February 2006
Molecular machines get a boost from a receptor that mimics logic gates by binding to both positive and negative ions.

Enzyme-like catalyst for organic reactions
22 February 2006
Amino acid derivatives found in numerous potent bioactive substances can be made in a single step, report researchers in the UK.

Reaction system that measures, mixes and reacts
31 January 2006
Small-scale device that generates, mixes, and reacts droplets in one place is an important step towards a miniature laboratory, say US researchers.
Features

Trash or treasure?
Could a fire in a Roman villa alter the way we look at art forgeries? Who can tell you whether jewels on show at the Oscars are real? Helen Carmichael meets the detectives

Fuel cells head for mass market
Fuel cells have been a 'next big thing' technology for as long as anyone can remember. Joe McEntee investigates when these versatile power sources will reach high-volume markets

Hydrogen gets onboard
Cars that run on hydrogen still fail to compete in real terms with traditional petrol vehicles. Maciej Gutowski and Tom Autrey investigate the advances in hydrogen storage material...

Extreme analysis
High pressures, cold temperatures and inaccessible samples all make analytical work challenging. Katie Gibb explores the techniques used by chemists working in hostile conditions

Avogadro: voice in the wilderness
Avogadro's hypothesis was key to solving many problems facing the chemical sciences in the 1800s. But his idea was initially rejected. Colin Russell reports
Regulars

Editorial: Engaging with the media
Inaccurate science stories will not go away unless more scientists talk to journalists
Your views...
Faking results - what are the consequences for science?
The chemist's guide to.
Chemical peel

Careers: An inspiring role
Leanne Hart's passion for encouraging people into the chemical industry prompted her to apply to become its young ambassador. She tells Katie Gibb about her year
Crossword and Su Doku
Prize crossword and Su Doku, March 2006
The last retort: Still baffled by H2O
Funny stuff, water. The most abundant liquid on our planet, universal solvent, major constituent of all living matter; yet water is far from fully characterised
Flashback
March - 60 years ago; 90 years ago; 95 years ago; 125 years ago; 130 years ago; 195 years ago
Chemistry World Letters, March 2006
Chemistry World Reviews, March 2006
