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Drop in for a tour highlighting the central role of women in shaping chemistry and the material sciences throughout history.
Drop in for a tour highlighting the central role of women in shaping chemistry and the material sciences throughout history.
Drop in for a tour highlighting the central role of women in shaping chemistry and the material sciences throughout history.
Drop in for a tour highlighting the central role of women in shaping chemistry and the material sciences throughout history.
Prestigious Horizon Prize recognizes exceptional contributions to chemistry education.
Drop in for a tour highlighting the central role of women in shaping chemistry and the material sciences throughout history.
Drop in for a tour highlighting the central role of women in shaping chemistry and the material sciences throughout history.
Drop in for a tour highlighting the central role of women in shaping chemistry and the material sciences throughout history.
From lightbulbs to lasers, many technologies use the luminescent properties of rare earth metals.
Students consider the positive, negative, and conflicting perspectives of plastics through a debate of the issues.
Drop in for a tour highlighting the central role of women in shaping chemistry and the material sciences throughout history.
Crushing, an ancient technique for transforming materials, remains central to our lives today.
Institute’s 2023 Ullyot lecturer shares prestigious award with K. Barry Sharpless and Morten Meldal for development of click and bioorthogonal chemistry.
Crushing, smashing, and grinding for the sake of greener science.
Research curator Jesse Smith takes readers of IUPAC’s digital news magazine on a watery journey of history and science with Institute’s latest exhibition.
A reclusive expert of 19th-century photography laid the foundation for green chemistry solutions emerging today.
Visitors can explore how this ancient technique of transforming materials is still central to our lives today.
Royal Society of Chemistry’s magazine talks to the Institute’s Brigitte van Tiggelen about the little-known German chemist.
Students explore the positive, negative, and conflicting perspectives of rare earth elements through a debate of the issues.
You are a lobbyist combining a love of science with years of experience in corporate law to protect the legal interests of the plastics industry.
Dive into the world of nixtamalization, and find out how you’re eating a small piece of ancient chemistry each time you bite into a taco.
This TV show and companion film series celebrates eight extraordinary women in science.
The Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center for the History of Chemistry supports a dynamic community of researchers interested in the history and social studies of science.
As child labor gave way to child education in the early 20th century, do-gooders sought a novel solution to juvenile delinquency.
Dive into the world of nixtamalization, a chemical process that allowed the Mesoamerican empires to thrive and tacos to taste good.
The ancestors of today’s CSI shows can be found between the covers of 20th-century detective stories.
What most frightened the Nobel Prize–winning chemist and explorer of Earth’s deep past?
A retrospective of the International Year of Chemistry, this exhibition celebrated three programs that encouraged youth to become more engaged with their chemical world.
Mildred Cohn fought prejudice to become a successful Jewish female chemist in an less-than-welcoming world.
When Jane Marcet wrote Conversations on Chemistry she had little idea it would introduce Michael Faraday into the world of science.