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Fuel Cell Cars: The Future or Gas Guzzlers in Disguise?
Hydrogen fuel cell cars seem great: hydrogen and oxygen in, nothing but water out. But if that hydrogen comes from dirty, carbon-emission spewing power plants, your sustainable car might not be so green after all.
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Better Pizza Through Chemistry
This week we show you how two simple changes can turn cardboard-y pizza into award winning pie.
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Perfect Chromatography Peaks: Clever Solutions To Peaks With Fronting, Tailing or Splitting
Join BUCHI application chemist, Björn Brodbeck, as he explains how to correct common peak malformations.
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Death and Decomposition
Are humans destroying the circle of life?
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There's Gold in Seawater! How Do We Get It?
The ocean has about 20 million tons of gold in it — that’s around 700 TRILLION DOLLARS worth of gold! In this episode of Reactions, we explore how, for over a century, people have struggled to collect it.
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What is a Cannabis Testing Lab? With Jini Curry
What is a cannabis testing laboratory? What kind of testing services do labs provide? What equipment is found in a cannabis testing lab? Each of these questions (and more!) are addressed in this Analytical Cannabis special episode of Teach Me in 10.
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The Protein Folding Revolution
Big leaps in our understanding of protein folding can open doors to new protein-based medicines and materials--designed from the ground up.
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Cancer in Nanocolor: A New Type of Microscope Slide
Researchers have developed a new type of microscope slide which uses nanotechnology to change the perceived color of cells without staining them.
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The Importance of Optimizing SRM Dwell Times for Large-Scale Targeted Compound Lists With Ed George
For this Teach Me in 10 episode we are joined by Ed George, senior application specialist at Thermo Fisher Scientific. Ed will provide an overview of dwell time settings on triple quadrupole mass spectrometers and the importance of this, as well as the impact and challenges with setting dwell times.
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The World’s Smallest Water Treatment Plant Comes in a Packet
About 800,000,000 people worldwide don’t have reliable access to clean water. Using a technology first developed to reuse dirty laundry water, scientists have developed a water treatment plant the size of a teabag. Inside, a potent chemical triple-threat removes microbes, heavy metals, silt and dirt to produce clean, safe water one bucket at a time.
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