Melanie Sanford with a green chalkboard and chemistry symbols

Feature

Melanie Sanford’s route from college gymnast to groundbreaking researcher

One-time gymnast Melanie Sanford has made a name for herself in catalysis and organometallic chemistry. Rebecca Trager charts her path to success, from her mentors to her mentoring

Illustrated portrait of Jon-Paul Griffiths with two fencing silhouettes in the background

Opinion

Jon-Paul Griffiths: ‘Starting a small company is a phenomenal experience’

The chief technology officer of Oxeco on spinning out, supporting entrepreneurs and the difficulties of identifying a market

Artist’s impression of Raphe Walley’s 17th century apothecary shop

Article

Apothecary inventory offers glimpse into medicines from the 17th century

Catalogue of shop in Nantwich, Cheshire reveals ‘treatments’ using everything from quicksilver and arsenic to ‘oil of earthworm’

Markita Landry in the laboratory looking at a sample

Research

This nanotechnology expert works with both plant and brain cells

Could Markita Landry’s research group be any more interdisciplinary?

NIH

Opinion

Scientific institutions have a long history of anticipatory obedience

Societies should learn from this and speak up to support inclusion

Opinion

Donna Nelson: ‘Being the science advisor to Breaking Bad was so much fun’

The well-known organic chemist on growing up in a small Oklahoma town, asking demographic questions and advising a hit television series

Opinion

Exploring the on-screen image of chemists

From Frankenstein to Breaking Bad and beyond

Careers

New UKRI terms do more to acknowledge the diversity of PhD researchers

But further stipend increases are needed to fully widen access to doctoral study

Highlights

Melanie Sanford with a green chalkboard and chemistry symbols

Melanie Sanford’s route from college gymnast to groundbreaking researcher

One-time gymnast Melanie Sanford has made a name for herself in catalysis and organometallic chemistry. Rebecca Trager charts her path to success, from her mentors to her mentoring

All 20 people

20 years. 20 chemists. 20 stories. Part 2

How has chemistry changed in the last two decades?

Sign language in chemistry

The new signs bringing greater understanding to organic chemistry

Rebecca Trager speaks to a US team developing a sign language lexicon for chemistry concepts that combines form with meaning to make the field more accessible for everyone

Graph

The health of chemistry across the pipeline

More students in the UK are studying chemistry at A-level than 20 years ago, but how does that translate to universities?

Portraits of David Baker, Demis Hassabis and John Jumper surrounded by red and blue protein alpha-helices and beta-sheets

How AI protein structure prediction and design won the Nobel prize

David Baker, Demis Hassabis and John Jumper won this year’s Nobel prize in chemistry. Jamie Durrani investigates the origins of a biochemistry revolution

NIH

Scientific institutions have a long history of anticipatory obedience

Societies should learn from this and speak up to support inclusion

Donna Nelson with a tornado

Opinion

Donna Nelson: ‘Being the science advisor to Breaking Bad was so much fun’

The well-known organic chemist on growing up in a small Oklahoma town, asking demographic questions and advising a hit television series

PhD students

Careers

New UKRI terms do more to acknowledge the diversity of PhD researchers

But further stipend increases are needed to fully widen access to doctoral study

Scientists in the lab

Opinion

Inclusion should be central for chemistry

Why chemistry must remain committed to DEI

News

New year honours recognise chemists’ services to inclusion and diversity

Services to biogeochemistry, science in government, and science and technology also rewarded in annual list

Feature

The new signs bringing greater understanding to organic chemistry

Rebecca Trager speaks to a US team developing a sign language lexicon for chemistry concepts that combines form with meaning to make the field more accessible for everyone

Opinion

Thriving as a Deaf chemistry PhD student

Asma Sheikh talks about growing up, discovering her passion for chemistry and being a teaching assistant

An illustrated portrait of Mary Sherman Morgan

Mary Sherman Morgan: The best kept secret in the space race

Anna Demming reveals the scientist who invented the fuel that powered the first US satellite into orbit, yet died with barely a trace on record of her achievements

An image showing a framed portrait of Martin Gouterman

Martin Gouterman: the gay man behind the four-orbital model

Abhik Ghosh tells the story of a porphyrin chemist who was a leading figure in Seattle’s gay rights movement of the 1960s

William Knox Jr

William Knox, the only Black supervisor in the Manhattan Project

The story of the Knox family is one of education overcoming adversity, finds Kit Chapman

Illustrated portrait of Jon-Paul Griffiths with two fencing silhouettes in the background

Jon-Paul Griffiths: ‘Starting a small company is a phenomenal experience’

The chief technology officer of Oxeco on spinning out, supporting entrepreneurs and the difficulties of identifying a market

Donna Nelson with a tornado

Donna Nelson: ‘Being the science advisor to Breaking Bad was so much fun’

The well-known organic chemist on growing up in a small Oklahoma town, asking demographic questions and advising a hit television series

Charlotte Williams

Charlotte Williams: ‘Being an academic is a wonderful job’

The award-winning inorganic chemist on early environmental influences and a career spanning industry and academia

Recycled plastic gravel

Opinion

The moral theories behind climate deadlock

Why is it so controversial to do the right thing for the environment?

Trophy on a circuit board

Opinion

Did AI just win the Nobel prizes in physics and chemistry?

The importance of the expert eye in scientific progress

Opinion

How much science should there be in philosophy?

A debate about metaphysics that’s crucial to how we understand the world

Opinion

Proteins’ shape and function are two sides of the same coin

A new perspective on the relationship between chemistry and biology

Opinion

There’s more to alchemy than its mystical nature

It was crucial to the development of chemistry

Opinion

The nuances of chemical confirmation

Supporting a hypothesis is more difficult than it might seem

Opinion

Taking a feminist standpoint on chemistry

How gender may influence scientific knowledge

Opinion

The rise of techno-science

Appreciating technology’s role in understanding how the world works

Arthur Vogel books

Opinion

Vogel’s textbooks and their international impact on teaching

A shared reference that we risk losing in a digital age

Chemistry superhero

Opinion

Super-powered science

Screaming fans excited about your research, the Sharpie on your lanyard for signing autographs – wouldn’t that be nice?

Berlin Wall

Research

Chemists use AI to uncover pigments used on Berlin Wall murals

Researchers hope work will help to preserve this art

The Royal mummy of Merneptah

Research

How does your mummy smell? If it’s ancient Egyptian woody, spicy and sweet

Analysis of odours could one day categorise which era a mummy came from

Article

Apothecary inventory offers glimpse into medicines from the 17th century

Catalogue of shop in Nantwich, Cheshire reveals ‘treatments’ using everything from quicksilver and arsenic to ‘oil of earthworm’

Opinion

Scientific institutions have a long history of anticipatory obedience

Societies should learn from this and speak up to support inclusion

Opinion

Inclusion should be central for chemistry

Why chemistry must remain committed to DEI

News

New year honours recognise chemists’ services to inclusion and diversity

Services to biogeochemistry, science in government, and science and technology also rewarded in annual list

Illustrated portrait of Jon-Paul Griffiths with two fencing silhouettes in the background

Opinion

Jon-Paul Griffiths: ‘Starting a small company is a phenomenal experience’

The chief technology officer of Oxeco on spinning out, supporting entrepreneurs and the difficulties of identifying a market

Cardiff university main building entrance

News

Cardiff University proposes merging chemistry department with other schools

Up to 10 chemistry staff could be made redundant under the proposals

Careers

Knowledge exchange will be vital for upskilling the chemistry workforce

To meet societal challenges, chemical scientists need more opportunities to learn across disciplines and sectors

Careers

How to have fewer, more effective meetings

Five strategies that can help individuals and institutions manage meetings better

News

Fuel cell scientist loses over a decade of work in suspected arson attack

Crowdfunder launched to help PhD student and owner of clean energy spin-out recover

Careers

Re-establishing my scientist identity in industry

How to embrace a career transition outside of academia

Headshot

Careers

How Lisa Alford inspires students and celebrates technicians

She was awarded the Royal Society’s 2024 Hauksbee award in recognition of her extraordinary achievements ‘behind the scenes’

Explaining science

Opinion

Take part in the #ChemistryConversations challenge

Will you share your enthusiasm for chemistry with more non-chemists?

Sign language in chemistry

Feature

The new signs bringing greater understanding to organic chemistry

Rebecca Trager speaks to a US team developing a sign language lexicon for chemistry concepts that combines form with meaning to make the field more accessible for everyone

Radio Canberra

Opinion

Cinematic science

Film screenings that celebrate science, cinema and art

News

Online archive of Humphry Davy’s notebooks opens to the public

Historic collection is the result of a five-year long citizen science project

News

Danish university pauses chemistry demonstrations following accident

‘Genie in a bottle’ demonstration failure hospitalised two,  leading to a review of all experiments in the school’s chemistry shows

News

Global ‘census’ of chemistry on YouTube finds thriving ecosystem of indie producers

Chemistry channels are primarily made up of independents with no affiliation with an institution or organisation but a passion to talk science