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Garden Gate |
Flower Shapes Here's a list of flowers and their shapes to help you mix and match and create your own combinations. |
Chemistry World January 15, 2009 Simon Hadlington |
Curvaceous crystals Spanish scientists have shown how elaborately curved crystalline structures, similar to those typically made by living organisms, can grow from simple solutions of metal carbonates. |
Chemistry World February 22, 2007 Richard Van Noorden |
Hydrogels Make Programmed Chemical Origami Israeli scientists have created elastic sheets which buckle into pre-programmed 3D shapes on command. |
Chemistry World August 25, 2013 Daniel Johnson |
Unconsidered chemistry could amplify global warming A link between the world's oceans' pH and climate change that has, until now, passed unnoticed could dramatically speed up global warming by lowering production of a smelly molecule, dimethyl sulfide, important for cloud formation. |
Chemistry World November 10, 2014 Emma Stoye |
Watching chemical gardens grow Plant-like formations -- known as chemical gardens -- were discovered more than 300 years ago, yet scientists still don't know exactly which factors influence their growth. |
Chemistry World July 12, 2012 David Bradley |
Homeostatic hydrogels to help heat the home Living things can take control of the physical environment in which they find themselves, monitoring and controlling their temperature, pH, various internal pressures and ion concentrations through a range of self-regulating feedback loops. |
Chemistry World February 5, 2013 James Urquhart |
Sea urchin inspires carbon capture catalyst UK scientists have taken inspiration from the sea urchin and shown how nickel nanoparticles could be a cheap and re-usable catalyst in a key step for capturing carbon dioxide produced by power plants and the chemical industry. |