Dance your PhD winner

News

Food chemist takes top prize of annual Dance your PhD contest

Interpretive dance explains thesis on why chillis burn and menthol cools

Woman checking wallet and finding no money

Careers

Cultural changes need to stop PhD students working for free

Top-down support is needed to stop exploitative PhD practices

Man using laptop at night

News

Materials scientist’s death at 47 from brain haemorrhage highlights long hours culture in China

Liu Yongfeng’s death isn’t the first instance of a Chinese academic with a heavy workload dying young

Man placing substance in a bucket, with gardening tools in the background

Opinion

Making myself at home in the lab

How experiments in a garden shed grew from a hobby to a profession

A young plant with mathematical formula forming a tree

Opinion

In search of truth and rules

To codify and predict ever more complex phenomena is one of science’s great drivers

Opinion

‘Equality means more than passing laws’

How to make chemistry spaces inclusive of all genders

Business

Out of the suburbs: the rise of urban labs

Could empty office blocks and shopping centres provide much-needed space for growing companies?

News

‘Exodus will require action’: chemistry laureates warn young researchers will desert US

Trump administration’s targeting of grants, funding and visas creating hostile environment for scientists

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

Trans-rights protesters outside the houses of parliament in London

‘Equality means more than passing laws’

How to make chemistry spaces inclusive of all genders

Woman in the lab

News

Analysis reveals ethnic minority applicants’ grant success rates still lower

Engineering and physical sciences’ review panels in UK more likely to award white researchers

Oblique view of the American Chemical Society logo on their building

News

American Chemical Society diversity programme comes under attack

Lawsuit argues that ACS’ Scholars Program discriminates against white and Asian applicants

Man balancing pile of geometric shapes

Opinion

Classifications, racial discrimination and Covid-19

Lessons with philosophical significance for how we group people and objects

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

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

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

Willie May

Willie May: ‘We need to find and support the “missing millions”’

The analytical chemist on growing up Black in Alabama in the 1950s and 1960s and his journey through NIST, academia and the AAAS presidency

Paul Alivisatos

Paul Alivisatos: ‘Physical chemistry brought me back into the fold’

The nanomaterials pioneer talks about coming from a family of immigrants, wandering as an undergraduate and finding his compass

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

A young plant with mathematical formula forming a tree

Opinion

In search of truth and rules

To codify and predict ever more complex phenomena is one of science’s great drivers

Man balancing pile of geometric shapes

Opinion

Classifications, racial discrimination and Covid-19

Lessons with philosophical significance for how we group people and objects

Opinion

The moral theories behind climate deadlock

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

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

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

Frankenstein set

Opinion

Exploring the on-screen image of chemists

From Frankenstein to Breaking Bad and beyond

Arthur Vogel books

Opinion

Vogel’s textbooks and their international impact on teaching

A shared reference that we risk losing in a digital age

Friedrich Adolf Paneth

Opinion

Paneth’s mirrors and the isolation of methyl radicals

Laying the groundwork for the study of combustion and photochemical reactions

News

Eleven chemists who have been honoured with a blue plaque

Celebrating the link between historic figures and the buildings they lived and worked in

News

Blue plaque honours founder of the Chemical Society set up 185 years ago

Historical sign commemorates Robert Warington’s life with tribute at his home

Opinion

Classifications, racial discrimination and Covid-19

Lessons with philosophical significance for how we group people and objects

Opinion

Scientific institutions have a long history of anticipatory obedience

Societies should learn from this and speak up to support inclusion

Man using laptop at night

News

Materials scientist’s death at 47 from brain haemorrhage highlights long hours culture in China

Liu Yongfeng’s death isn’t the first instance of a Chinese academic with a heavy workload dying young

Francis Crick Institute

Business

Out of the suburbs: the rise of urban labs

Could empty office blocks and shopping centres provide much-needed space for growing companies?

News

Serbia limits academics’ research time to just one hour a day

Researchers say controversial policy will block majority of scientists from applying for grants

Careers

Bridging the gap after submitting a PhD thesis

Finding ways to fund students as they search for jobs and complete lab work for publications

Opinion

The value of good software extends beyond its cost

Whether third-party or built in-house, thoughtful design and implementation can improve workflows and make science more inclusive

Careers

Hidden from view: being a scientific advisor for the emergency services

Stephen Yao’s expertise helps the emergency services deal with chemical incidents

Dance your PhD winner

News

Food chemist takes top prize of annual Dance your PhD contest

Interpretive dance explains thesis on why chillis burn and menthol cools

Man placing substance in a bucket, with gardening tools in the background

Opinion

Making myself at home in the lab

How experiments in a garden shed grew from a hobby to a profession

Woman reading lab report to chemical glassware

Opinion

I use storytelling to write great lab reports

A formal writeup of an experiment has much in common with a thrilling story

Man presenting with two big screens behind

Careers

Does gamification have a place in chemistry education?

Escape rooms, murder mysteries and virtual reality are being used to try to make the subject more attractive to students

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’

Opinion

Take part in the #ChemistryConversations challenge

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

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