ScienceLink artikelen in C2W international 1, 2022
View all stories from this issue.
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InternationalCatalyst model overhauled
Oxidised metals also appear to be able to take on an active role as catalysts for CO2 conversion, contrary to what scientists had previously thought.
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International‘We did not expect to see this within our scientific career’
Science and Nature consider the prediction of protein folding with artificial intelligence to be the scientific breakthrough of 2021.
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InternationalQuantum effects in biology: a load of rubbish or the only explanation?
Entanglement, tunnelling and coherence may also do their work in the warm, messy environment of the biological cell.
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International‘Many basic aspects of chemistry come together in glycochemistry’
Besides her efforts in outreach, inclusivity, diversity and helping early-stage researchers, Marthe Walvoort is building a career based on sugars.
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InternationalNew more dangerous HIV variant discovered in the Netherlands
A variant of the HIV-1 subtype-B that is more infectious and virulent than previously known variants has been circulating in the Netherlands for twenty years.
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International‘Don’t forget that plastic also contributes to a more sustainable world’
Since October 2021 Gijs Langeveld is behind the wheel at the Polymer Science Park. How does he see the future of the PSP under his leadership?
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InternationalSafe tattoo ink hurts (entrepreneurs) a lot
Dutch tattoo parlours are currently desperate for REACH-compliant tattoo ink. Since 4 January, their old ink inventory has become unusable, and the alternative is still a long way off.
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InternationalNon-target screening: the art of looking at everything
KWR Water Research Institute uses state-of-the-art high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) to simultaneously examine as many substances as possible.
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InternationalSynthetic immune receptors speed disease resistance in crops
Plants lack the ability to develop antibodies against a new virus. British researchers present a new concept: synthetic immune receptors ‘on demand’.
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InternationalCryo-EM reveals new details about RNA origami
Researchers at Aarhus University have used cryo-EM to gain a better understanding of the folding process that dictates RNA origami.