Articles tagged with "Chemistry"

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Heat, not light could shine the way for drug development, suggests study

November 9, 2025
Drugs manufacture might be made speedier and cheaper if makers opted for heat technology in favour of more complex methods, suggests new research from the University of Manchester.

No-braining training

October 26, 2025
New job, same old induction, rues Matthew Partridge.

Collaborative science in the spotlight

October 26, 2025
As the NEC Birmingham prepares for this year’s Lab Innovations show from 29-30 October, the event’s theme of ‘co-LAB-oration’ promises to be more than a simple play on words.

RGU secures £800,000 grant to drive clean hydrogen innovation

October 25, 2025
Researchers from Robert Gordon University School of Computing, Engineering and Technology have secured £0.8 million for a clean energy project to produce hydrogen using waste steam from nuclear facilities.

Evident returns to focus on the small and scientifically beautiful

October 18, 2025
One of the world’s best known photomicrography competitions, Evident’s Image of the Year, is inviting entries for 2026.

Launch of three new microwave digestion systems

October 13, 2025
Quality analysis with ICP-MS and AA/ICP-OES starts with good sample preparation and for this to be successful, effective microwave digestion is the first step. Analytix is launching three new Milestone...

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Mark of quality

October 13, 2025
An important international standard, ISO/IEC 17025:2017 sets clear rules for how testing and calibration laboratories should work to produce valid results, and helps builds trust with consumers, businesses and regulators,...

Doctoring priorities

October 6, 2025
The medical profession is a key laboratory client. So, it pays to understand the strategic priorities that inform doctors’ testing orders, argues Dirk Heckel.

Laboratory News new issue: is science publishing too obsessed with citation?

October 5, 2025
Science publishing has become too focused on achieving citations at the expense of advancing knowledge, claims an industry critic.

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