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Chemistry World June 19, 2014 |
The colorful science Chemists and artists have been inspiring each other to more colorful heights for centuries. Philip Ball traces the development of paints and pigments. |
Chemistry World January 7, 2015 |
Flowing rivers of mercury Philip Ball investigates claims that the burial chamber of China's first emperor contains rivers of shimmering mercury. |
Chemistry World December 2006 Philip Ball |
Opinion: The Crucible Being the most applied of the fundamental sciences, chemistry has always had a commercial aspect, which means that its knowledge carries a premium and has sometimes been jealously protected. |
Chemistry World October 2011 Philip Ball |
Column: The Crucible Salt Awareness week seeks to highlight the health hazards of salt overconsumption. |
Chemistry World August 28, 2015 Andrea Sella |
Lippmann's electrometer Gabriel Lippmann Luxembourger physicist (1845 -- 1921). Invented a mercury-based electrometer and won the Nobel prize for developing color photography. |
Chemistry World October 18, 2007 Simon Hadlington |
Nanoparticle Reveals Sulfur's Midas Touch Researchers in the US have taken a snapshot of the inside of a gold nanoparticle, shedding crucial new light on one of chemistry's longest-standing questions: how does sulfur bind to gold? |
Chemistry World October 29, 2013 Tim Wogan |
Mercury's dark influence on art European researchers used density functional theory and other theoretical techniques to calculate how mercury might end up on the surface of degraded paint. |