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  • AlphaGenome & the RNA world hypothesis | The chemical breakdown podcast
    2026/02/11

    This week, we discuss the new deep learning model AlphaGenome and visit the very beginning of life on Earth with Mason Wakley and Neil Withers.

    Google DeepMind has released a new deep learning model that can predict the effect of small changes to DNA sequences up to one million base pairs in length. What does this new tech mean for our understanding of the human genome?

    And, how did life start on Earth, before the first cell came to be? We discuss the RNA world hypothesis and breakdown the chemistry it's built on.

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    27 分
  • Bench-stable butyllithium & secrets of Pompeii's limescale | The chemical breakdown podcast
    2026/01/28

    This week, we discuss new butyllithium formulations and ancient limescale chemistry with Emma Pewsey and Phillip Broadwith. New bench-stable tert- and n-butyllithium formulations developed by Merck KGaA, should make organometallic chemistry safer and more accessible. What's different about these formulations and how do they work? And a team based in Germany have managed to reconstruct the history of water sources used in Pompeii from an unlikely source: limescale. We discuss the findings and what chemistry can tell us about our past.

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    24 分
  • Halogen-bond catalysis & the future of total synthesis | The chemical breakdown podcast
    2026/01/15

    Welcome to the first episode of our latest podcast series, The chemical breakdown. Each week, we'll dive deeper into two stories we've covered here at Chemistry World. We'll provide insight into the facts, why you should care, and what it means for the chemistry community. We'll also give you that week's headlines to keep you up to date on what's happening in the chemistry community. And finally, we'll end each episode with a brief section on what was happening this week in chemistry history.

    This week, we discuss total synthesis and halogen-bond catalysis with Jennifer Newton and Jamie Durrani. The field of total synthesis has endured for almost 200 years, but with mounting funding pressures and shifting priorities, what will the future hold? And halogen-bond catalysis is an emerging technique that many chemists might not have encountered. We'll delve into where it came from and the potential uses of this exciting new tool.

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    27 分
  • Chemistry World podcast – January 2017
    2017/02/03

    This month we introduce our new puzzles page, discuss the implications of Trump for science and meet Yuri Oganessian, the only living person with an element named after him

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    47 分
  • Chemistry World Book Club podcast – Herding Hemingway's Cats
    2016/07/26
    Six-toed cats and misconceptions in genetics are discussed in this months podcast
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    1分未満
  • Chemistry World Book Club podcast – Sorting the beef from the bull
    2016/06/22
    This month we discuss the ubiquitous nature of food fraud and its detection
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    23 分
  • Chemistry World Book Club podcast – Scientific paper writing
    2016/05/11
    This month, we discuss how to write quality scientific papers
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    29 分
  • Chemistry World Book Club podcast – Why science is sexist
    2016/04/18
    This month we discuss unconscious bias and other reasons why science is sexist
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    23 分