ScienceLink artikelen in C2W International 2025 – Pagina 2

  • PressPhoto
    International

    Bitter pill now easier to swallow

    2025-04-09T13:08:00Z

    For (young) children, swallowing large pills or capsules is difficult or even impossible. The Pediatric Praziquantel Consortium succeeded in developing a modified version of an existing Schistosomiasis drug that is also suitable for young children. 

  • algen stressrespons
    International

    Stress-resistant algae

    2025-04-09T13:02:00Z

    Plants have a lot to endure. Burning heat, extreme drought, hungry insects, destructive fungi and so on. Researchers in Göttingen have looked at the response to these stress factors in detail from algae and compared them to land plants.  

  • Labsafety1_shutterstock_2596579913
    International

    Safety goes beyond gloves

    2025-04-08T12:43:00Z

    Health and safety in the laboratory is an issue that most researchers give too little thought to, according to occupational hygienist Arco Engelen. During the LabSafety event on 20 May, he will not only point out the elephant in the room, but also provide tools for dealing with health and ...

  • VCD molecuul
    International

    Bringing hidden chirality to vibrational light.

    2025-04-07T11:17:00Z

    When a molecule is cryptochiral, it is particularly difficult to determine its stereochemistry. Using vibrational circular dichroism, a group from Groningen has managed to crack this tough problem, as they report in Chemistry A European Journal.

  • BW_Niche-Expansion_Colorized82_crop (003)__
    International

    Stem cell switch

    2025-04-02T09:55:00Z

    A single molecular ‘switch’ seems sufficient to activate stem cells. This finding has the potential to significantly improve the efficacy and reliability of cell therapies and bone marrow transplants.   

  • IMG_2306
    International

    Electrons for green molecules

    2025-04-02T08:30:00Z

    Two papers from a group in Amsterdam show insights in electrochemical pathways. ‘If you want to transfer these processes towards the industrial scale, you need to understand the pathway.’

  • C2W_ColumnIsabelle_2025-04-02_PhDCompletion
    International

    The struggle of timely PhD completion

    2025-04-01T09:38:00Z

    Isabelle Kohler explores the structural issues behind PhD delays and shares practical advice for both PhD students and supervisors to support timely and sustainable PhD completion

  • Chirale halfgeleider
    International

    Organic semiconductor emits spinning light for more efficient OLED screens

    2025-04-01T09:13:00Z

    Researchers at TU Eindhoven and the University of Cambridge have created an organic semiconductor in which electrons move in a spiral pattern. The light emitted could make OLED screens in televisions and smartphones much more energy efficient. 

  • Meme palladium
    International

    Palladium

    2025-04-01T08:56:00Z

    Most scientific research will not win a Nobel Prize, writes columnist Sjoerd Rijpkema. Are we too attached to our boundaries?

  • Finfarma1
    International

    Putting the F in pharma

    2025-03-26T13:52:00Z

    Adding fluorine to drug molecules can be tricky, but is often worthwhile. Rachel Brazil talks to the chemists trying to tame the ninth element. 

  • Neumann-liggend
    International

    Podium: Kevin Neumann

    2025-03-26T11:06:00Z

    Our members form the beating heart of our societies. Here, we regularly highlight one of them. This time, it’s KNCV-member Kevin Neumann. 

  • Meme pechgeneratie
    International

    The unfortunate generation

    2025-03-24T09:14:00Z

    Our new columnist Sjoerd Rijpkema distills his thoughts and opinions about chemistry and society into a meme. This week: the compensation for students in the Netherlands who didn’t get a ‘basisbeurs’.

  • Kogelvrijvest in magnetron
    International

    Microwave recycling of bulletproof vests

    2025-03-20T14:25:00Z

    Researchers have succeeded in recycling powdered aramid fibres using microwave radiation, according to a paper in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

  • Simon Hageman
    International

    Cooling down the earth through use of bioenergy with carbon storage

    2025-03-19T09:17:00Z

    Cooling down the earth through use of bioenergy with carbon storage. By using biomass not only as an energy source, but also reducing CO2 in the process, you create a system where you lower CO2 in the atmosphere. As a result, you cool the earth.

  • shutterstock_2247078069
    International

    First detected 40 years ago, a byproduct in chloraminated drinking water has finally been identified

    2025-03-19T08:21:00Z

    The nature of an ‘unidentified product’ in drinking water disinfected with chloramines, which serves over 113 million people in the US alone, has finally been revealed by researchers in the US and Switzerland.

  • C2W_ColumnIsabelle_2025-03-19_Money
    International

    Take charge of your finances

    2025-03-18T11:15:00Z

    Isabelle Kohler shares her journey from financial uncertainty to financial confidence and offers practical advice to help early-career researchers take control of their financial future.

  • reuzenpanda
    International

    Carnivore prefers bamboo

    2025-03-12T14:15:00Z

    The dietary choice of giant pandas is a mystery to scientists because of their carnivorous gastrointestinal tract. The presence of bamboo microRNAs in the blood of pandas sheds new light on the exchange of microRNAs between plants and animals.

  • BioBTX Eye-openers
    International

    BioBTX develops technology for sustainable aromatics

    2025-03-12T13:44:00Z

    BioBTX has developed technology to sustainably manufacture high-performance materials by converting waste into chemical building blocks.

  • Close-up nanoribbons
    International

    All tied up: germanene nanoribbons could be useful for quantum computers

    2025-03-11T15:45:00Z

    Researchers from Twente and Utrecht have made strips of germanium atoms that are one atom thick and a few nanometres wide. The two-dimensional nanoribbons have properties that could be useful in future quantum computers.

  • 1_3_300x
    International

    S(tea)ping against metals

    2025-03-06T08:17:00Z

    Some cultures serve a cup of tea with every meal. Recently, researchers at Northwestern University discovered that tea can filter out some of the heavy metals. As well as being tasty, a cup of tea now seems to have another small health benefit.