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Video: Why Canadian trash costs $30,000 per gram

How do you turn nuclear waste into a $30,000-per-gram commodity? Tritium, once discarded as a by-product of Canadian nuclear reactors, is now one of the most expensive materials on Earth. This rare isotope of hydrogen powers ...

Evidence stacks up for poisonous books containing toxic dyes

If you come across brightly colored, cloth-bound books from the Victorian era, you might want to handle them gently, or even steer clear altogether. Some of their attractive hues come from dyes that could pose a health risk ...

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Analytical Chemistry
Great British Bake Off finalist discusses the parallels between chemistry and baking
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Video: Making this Parkinson's drug is just turtles all the way down
Analytical Chemistry
Why doesn't water help with spicy food? What about milk or beer?
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Japan biochemist who discovered statins, Akira Endo, dies
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Video: This edible mushroom could kill you
Materials Science
With the help of catalysts the chemical industry can be revolutionized and create a circular economy, say researchers
Analytical Chemistry
Chemist explores the real-world science of Star Wars
Analytical Chemistry
Many old books contain toxic chemicals—here's how to spot them
Biochemistry
Some plant-based steaks and cold cuts are lacking in protein, researchers find
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Video: Is there a quick fix for ocean acidification?
Biochemistry
The flavors of fire: How does heat make food taste good?
Analytical Chemistry
Computational chemistry needs to be sustainable too, say researchers
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Video: Using chemistry and a 300-year-old technique to reinvent a drink
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What washing machine settings can I use to make my clothes last longer?
Analytical Chemistry
Vinegar and baking soda: A cleaning hack or just a bunch of fizz?
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Video: Complex chemistry in the cold depths of space
Analytical Chemistry
Scientists develop new machine learning method for modeling chemical reactions
Materials Science
Using metabolomics for assessing safety of chemicals may reduce the use of lab rats
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Video: Are ammonia engines the way of the future?
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Exploring the chemistry behind love this Valentine's Day

Other news

Plants & Animals
Slender-billed Curlew may be extinct, marking the disappearance of a third bird species from the Western Palaearctic
Earth Sciences
Man scouring Google Earth found a mysterious scar in the Australian outback. Now we know what caused it
Astronomy
WEAVE spectrograph uncovers dual nature of galaxy shock
Social Sciences
Wildlife monitoring technologies used to intimidate and spy on women, study finds
Environment
Scientists seek miracle pill to stop methane cow burps
General Physics
Extending classical black hole inequalities into the quantum realm
Plants & Animals
First successful test of wild minke whales reveals they have ultrasonic hearing
Archaeology
Healthy elbow room: Social distancing in Neolithic mega-settlements
Other
Saturday Citations: Sweaty, remarkable humans; ocean level rise projections; closeup of a star in another galaxy
Analytical Chemistry
Sustainable method can electrosynthesize important chemical for synthetic rubber production
Astrobiology
Ryugu asteroid sample rapidly colonized by terrestrial life despite strict contamination control
Astrobiology
Oldest direct evidence of hot water activity on Mars found
Astronomy
2 million mph galaxy smash-up seen in unprecedented detail
Evolution
Gene regulation study reports surprising results: Extensive regions of DNA belong to multiple gene switches
Archaeology
Peaches spread across North America through Indigenous networks, radiocarbon dating and document analysis show
General Physics
Accessing the lesser known nucleon: New neutron measurement can help physicists learn about nucleon structure and spin
Biochemistry
Natural substance from edible cyanobacterium could combat skin aging by enhancing collagen
Molecular & Computational biology
'e-Drive': New gene drive reverses insecticide resistance in pests... then disappears
Archaeology
Earliest fish-trapping facility in Central America discovered in Maya lowlands
Paleontology & Fossils
Fossil discovery reveals giant worm lizard with snail-cracking jaws

Drug discovery and development—in space

Carrying out scientific experiments in space allows scientists to study and make drugs without gravity, which can lead to surprising results that improve research back on Earth. According to a cover story in Chemical & Engineering ...

Nobel prize for three chemists who made molecules 'click'

Three scientists were jointly awarded this year's Nobel Prize in chemistry on Wednesday for developing a way of "snapping molecules together" that can be used to explore cells, map DNA and design drugs that can target diseases ...

Video: Why isn't weed killer working anymore?

Farmers used to worry about weeds. Then, herbicides solved that problem. At least for a while. In 1997, there were 432 new patents for herbicides; by 2009, there were only 65.