All Chemistry World articles in December 2024
View all stories from this issue.
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Business
Opposition to lithium mines hampers green technology supply chain
Europe and US seek to escape Chinese dominance in critical minerals
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Opinion
Letters: December 2024
Readers share concerns over classifying ethanol as reprotoxic, celebrate undergraduate practical innovation, and more
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Opinion
Learning to listen
Many things have changed in the last two decades, but effective collaboration is more important than ever
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Feature
20 years. 20 chemists. 20 stories. Part 2
How has chemistry changed in the last two decades?
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Puzzle
December 2024 puzzles
Download the puzzles from the December 2024 print issue of Chemistry World
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Opinion
Mary Virginia Orna: ‘It felt like I was coming home to something I never knew existed’
The 90-year-old colour chemist on overcoming discrimination and the three loves of her life; Latin, chemistry and Italian opera
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Careers
The narrative CV: a step towards more inclusive science?
Exploring an alternative to a traditional list of achievements
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Opinion
Thriving as a Deaf chemistry PhD student
Asma Sheikh talks about growing up, discovering her passion for chemistry and being a teaching assistant
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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
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News
AlphaFold developer says AI is just getting started in science
Chemistry Nobel laureate John Jumper says latest version of AlphaFold is making good progress on interactions between molecules and protein
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Careers
Financial challenges affect the health of UK chemistry
Maintaining a healthy chemistry pipeline requires affordable education and training routes
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Research
Colour-changing textiles for temperature regulation
A new smart fabric switches between reflecting and absorbing states without external energy inputs
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Opinion
What are the limits of life?
In search of design principles that would apply to living systems evolved anywhere in the universe
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News
New recommendations to assist UK move away from animals in chemical safety assessments
UK well-positioned to become a leader in animal-free testing
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Opinion
My assistance dog gave me the confidence to start a PhD
When anxiety threatens, Phoenix is on hand to help
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Business
Shell appeal overturns ruling enforcing faster emissions cuts
Dutch court underlines firm’s climate responsibility but rejects legally binding reduction requirement
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Research
Tomato sweetness boosted by gene editing to knock out two genes
Glucose and fructose levels were increased by 30%
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Research
Microcrystal electron diffraction promises a revolution in study of proteins, small molecules
Technique offers a way to get around problems with hard-to-crystallise proteins, already scoring impressive successes with a Parkinson’s protein