A ring of 13 carbon atoms and two chlorine atoms has a remarkable molecular structure that means you would have to go around the loop four times to return to your starting position
@hughpatrickryan
Scientific Editor for Chemical Science, published by the RSC, and small-time journalist for Chemistry World. #ChemSky #ChemSci Gaming, ballroom dancing, rollerskating, piano, and D&D - Iβm acceptably mediocre at all of them! #Switch2 (he/him βοΈπ³οΈβπ)
A ring of 13 carbon atoms and two chlorine atoms has a remarkable molecular structure that means you would have to go around the loop four times to return to your starting position
An unexpected early birthday present!
pubs.rsc.org/en/Content/A...
What happens if you combine two oppositely charged coordination cages? You make a doubly porous liquid!
This project was my baby during my PhD/postdoc and Iβm thrilled that itβs finally out in @materialshorizons.rsc.org #ChemSky
Nice one, Ben!
Five-thousand-year-old microbes reveal natureβs antibiotic arms race, and hold clues to both the threat of drug resistance and the cure.
Iβm ill in bed but Iβll still plug my new @chemistryworld.com story! I wanted to call it βFrom dough to durableβ but my editor told me to save it for social media π€£ It was great to talk to Soyeon Kim and Dongyeop Oh about their material! #ChemSky
www.chemistryworld.com/news/gluten-...
Aromatic 5-silicon rings synthesized at last 2 groups working independently construct the same long-sought compound via different routes
Move over cyclopentadiene anionβthereβs a new five-membered aromatic ring in town, and this one is made of silicon. Two research teams working independently report the first examples of pentasilacyclopentadienideβan all-silicon version of cyclopentadienides. cen.acs.org/materials/in...
#chemsky π§ͺ
βοΈAlways exciting to see a computational paper #compchem in @chemicalscience.rsc.org π§ͺ @gabrielmerino.bsky.social
Propaganda! Just wait until summer and it will be βrefreshing and nuttyβ or some rubbish π€£
Itβs an always flavour!
Tfw you get stood up on a date but you get cake to go anyway π π» #cake
Exclusive: chemistry's international governing body is moving from its home of 25 years in the US to two cities in Europe.
Best thing - freedom to explore what really interests you.
Worst thing - you have to monetise your passion!
Dissolved in poly(alpha-olefin) oil, the reagents donβt ignite or smoke in air, making them easier to handle and less prone to degradation on storage, while maintaining performance across a range of reaction types.
I managed to take a photo as I dropped my phone the other night β¦ oddly artistic but my heart plummeted as my phone did π€£ #clumsy #savemyscreen
Awesome to see that @paul-mcgonigal.bsky.socialβs work was picked up by Chemistry World!
Episode 1 of our brand-new chemistry podcast is here! Host Mariana Kneppers gives you the latest headlines, then sits down for a chat with CW staff Jennifer Newton and Jamie Durrani. They first discuss total synthesis, then take on a different subject: halogen-bond catalysis.
On 26 February, we'll be kicking off this year's webinars with an in-depth look at the chemistry of coffee! Learn how electrochemical reactions influence production, and explore the fascinating chemical secrets behind these much-adored flavours.
WHAT?! Count me in! <3
Diagram showing the structure of ammonia monooxygenase (AMO) from Nitrosospira briensis. The left panel depicts the enzyme in native membranes with three labeled copper-binding sites: CuB (periplasmic), CuC, and CuD (transmembrane), and a lipid molecule positioned between CuC and CuD. The right panel zooms in on the AMO active site, highlighting the CuC and CuD sites separated by approximately 8.0 Γ , with the lipid molecule spanning between them. Copper ions are shown as cyan spheres, and the lipid is illustrated in pink.
This week's Chemical Science Pick of the Week #ChemSciPicks is from Professor Amy C. Rosenzweig (Northwestern University): "Simultaneous occupancy of CuC and CuD in the ammonia monooxygenase active site"
Read for free at: doi.org/10.1039/D5SC...
And the Pikachu is *atrocious*!
The Charizard/Venusaur/Blastoise though π
The anomeric effect is well known to chemistry students. But do we need to be more subtle when we think about what causes it?
Our Chemical Science Pick of the Week for this week is "High-yield Synthesis of Graphene Quantum Dots from Spent Graphite and Application in Hydrogel Zn Batteries" by Hongshuai Hou et al. from Central South University.
Read it for free here: doi.org/10.1039/D5SC...
Applications close on 12 January (that's next Monday) β don't miss the chance to further your sci-comm career by working with our team.
Cover image from VΓ©ronique Michelet et al., Chem. Sci., 2025,16, 17611-17620, https://doi.org/10.1039/D5SC05338B
HNY from Chemical Science! We wish you all a successful and peaceful 2026!
Thank you to all of our readers, authors, and reviewers for making 2025 a huge success! We were delighted by the excellent papers in our 15th anniversary collections and we're excited for 2026!
#ChemSky #HNY #2026
in 2026 we are NOT hustling, we are NOT grinding, we are doing just enough Job to have money for Video Game
Graphical abstract for "The role of transmembrane proton transport rates in mild mitochondrial uncoupling by arylamide substituted fatty acids" by Tristan Rawling et al.
This week's Chemical Science Pick of the Week is from Tristan Rawling, @profphilgale.bsky.social, et al.
"The role of transmembrane proton transport rates in mild mitochondrial uncoupling by arylamide substituted fatty acids"
Read it here for free: doi.org/10.1039/D5SC...
#ChemSky