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15-Feb-2013 - Scientists in China have made polymer gels that behave like artificial tongues. By measuring how the gels swell, bend and fluorescence, the researchers found that the gels selectively respond to and can distinguish between sourness (citric acid and gluconic acid), sweetness (glucose), saltiness ...
07-Nov-2012 - The Royal Society of Chemistry welcomed the implementation of newly-developed non-animal methods of testing for poisons in shellfish from the seas around Britain which has led to 14,000 mice being spared testing and death in 2012. If the techniques were to be adopted worldwide it could save a ...
26-Jul-2012 - Prof Stefan Przyborski, CSO and founder of Reinnervate Ltd, has been recognised with a top award from the Royal Society of Chemistry. The Rita and John Cornforth award 2012 recognises Prof. Przyborski’s leadership and inter-disciplinary work at the boundaries of physical chemistry and biology, ...
03-Aug-2011 - A reusable, natural and cheap amylose-functionalised graphene sensor was developed for highly sensitive and visual fluorescent chiral sensing by a team in China.The team found that the sensor’s detection sensitivity toward L-tryptophan was over 100 times higher than that of recently reported ...
22-Mar-2011 - British scientists have used infrared spectroscopy to identify biochemical differences between endometrial tissue growing outside the uterus (ectopic) and the endometrial tissue of the uterus (eutopic). They also compared the results with tissue from endometriosis-free women (benign ...
22-Dec-2010 - The organochlorine 2,2-dichloropropionate, also known as dalapon, is a herbicide that’s regulated in potable water in Australia, but it is also a little known disinfection by-propduct (DBP). Typical levels when formed as a DBP and their relationship to other DBPs are virtually ...
22-Dec-2010 - A water-soluble zinc-based fluorescent sensor to detect pyrophosphate in blood has been developed by scientists from China. Pyrophosphate plays an important role in metabolic processes in the body but a lack of the compound can lead to Mönckeberg’s arteriosclerosis – calcium deposits in arteries. ...
06-Dec-2010 - A sensor that can discriminate between different tannins and be used to fingerprint a wide variety of red wines to confirm their authenticity has been developed. US scientists report in Chemical Science that they made the sensor with colour-changing indicators. They used it to test wine samples ...
25-Nov-2010 - A sensor to be injected into the skin just like a tattoo that measures sodium concentrations in the blood has been developed by US scientists. The sensor could be used to monitor diseases or warn against dangerously low sodium levels during exercise. Scientists report in Integrative Biology that ...
15-Nov-2010 - Microfluidics can be used to trap a single DNA–enzyme complex in its native state, without immobilisation. These studies have usually been performed by immobilising either the enzyme or the DNA on a glass slide, but this may modify their properties, and make it difficult to analyse the ...
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