Chemistry

  1. Chemistry

    Microbes craft unusual crystals

    Bacteria dwelling in an abandoned iron mine form unusual crystals that could help scientists look for signs of previous life on Mars.

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  2. Chemistry

    Mini Motor: Synthetic molecule yields nanoscale rotor

    Scientists have built a tiny rotor out of a synthesized molecule that rotates in the presence of an electric field.

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  3. Chemistry

    New champions among corrosive microbes

    Newly discovered strains of bacteria have developed a metabolic shortcut for eating away iron with great efficiency.

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  4. Chemistry

    Clean hydrogen fuel from corn?

    A new reactor can convert ethanol from corn into hydrogen fuel with enough efficiency to make the process economical.

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  5. Chemistry

    Radical molecule could produce plastic magnets

    A team of chemists has synthesized an unusual organic molecule that could lead to cheaper and lighter magnets.

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  6. Chemistry

    Nitrogen Unbound: New reaction breaks strong chemical link

    Researchers have developed a new way to turn nitrogen into ammonia that could improve upon an energy-intensive, 90-year-old method used to make fertilizers.

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  7. Chemistry

    Nature’s tiniest rotor runs like clockwork

    By manipulating a tiny protein found in most living cells, researchers created a molecular rotor that can convert mechanical motion into chemical energy.

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  8. Chemistry

    Nobel prize recognizes future for plastics

    The Nobel Prize in Chemistry went to three researchers for the discovery and development of plastics that conduct electricity.

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  9. Chemistry

    Moonlighting: Reflective protein causes squid to shimmer

    Squid can manipulate light in amazing ways to camouflage themselves at night, and researchers have unveiled a bizarre set of reflective proteins in the animals' tissues that underlie this trait.

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  10. Chemistry

    The March of History: Terra-cotta warriors show their true colors

    As archaeologists continue to excavate the famous Chinese terra-cotta warriors, a new restoration technique could preserve the figures' paint coats, which normally peel off when exposed to the elements.

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  11. Chemistry

    Clays catalyze life?

    Clay minerals at the bottom of the ocean may have played a crucial role in assembling the very first cells on Earth billions of years ago.

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  12. Chemistry

    The Nature of Things

    An earth scientist's proposed alternative periodic table of elements is emblematic of the growing desire among scientists to recast this 130-year-old chart.

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