The skills they have
developed as chemists are essential in those other roles.
Not exact matches
By authoring scientific papers and presenting at scientific conferences such
as AOAC International, International Food Technology Association and the American Association of Cereal
Chemists, Bia works each day to
develop innovative tools to help food manufacturers produce the safest products for even the most allergen - sensitive consumers.
A team of
chemists at the University of Bristol have made significant steps towards
developing a sustainable alternative to fossil fuels having produced a petrol using beer
as a key ingredient.
As a chemist as well as a chef, Peter combines his chemistry with food to develop product recipes for Seasonings, Sauces, Condiments, and Salsa's thattake the guess work out of cookin
As a
chemist as well as a chef, Peter combines his chemistry with food to develop product recipes for Seasonings, Sauces, Condiments, and Salsa's thattake the guess work out of cookin
as well
as a chef, Peter combines his chemistry with food to develop product recipes for Seasonings, Sauces, Condiments, and Salsa's thattake the guess work out of cookin
as a chef, Peter combines his chemistry with food to
develop product recipes for Seasonings, Sauces, Condiments, and Salsa's thattake the guess work out of cooking!
Pharmacist and
chemist John McLaughlin changed the soda shop standard by
developing mass bottling techniques and serving Canada Dry where people gather in masses, such
as ballparks and beaches.
This was a Prime Minister who, after all, began her career
as an industrial
chemist,
developing products.
Also look at the institution's broader scientific environment, because «you can benefit from help even from people that are not with the label «biomaterials,»» says Dupont - Gillain, who,
as a bioengineer and physical
chemist, collaborates with colleagues in surface science and cell biologists to
develop biomimetic surfaces that can trigger desired cell behaviors.
This sort of work makes a big impact:
chemists who work in product development touch every aspect of daily life, such
as transforming natural gas into plastic packaging, creating sparkly toothpaste that coaxes kids to brush their teeth and
developing the nation's favourite chocolate bar.
The interdisciplinary project team is made up of eco - and human toxicologists, physicists,
chemists and biologists, and they have just managed to take their first major step forward in achieving their goal: they have
developed a method for testing a variety of environmental samples such
as river water, animal tissue, or human urine and blood that can detect nanomaterials at a concentration level of nanogram per liter (ppb — parts per billion).
Researchers in the Rice lab of
chemist and bioengineer Jeffrey Hartgerink had just such an experience with the hydrogels they
developed as a synthetic scaffold to deliver drugs and encourage the growth of cells and blood vessels for new tissue.
He hopes to pursue projects such
as developing therapeutics with
chemists, working with biophysicists to study protein conformational changes relevant to viral entry into the cell, and investigating cellular trafficking pathways relevant to the viral life cycle in collaboration with cell biologists.
A year later, he took a permanent position at NIST
as a research
chemist in the same division and spent the next 3 years
developing methods to generate polymers and test their flammability.
Chemist John Pojman of Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge adds that such roving droplets «might be useful
as a pumping mechanism for microfluidics, converting chemical energy to mechanical motion in small devices,» such
as the microfluidic labs - on - a-chip many researchers are
developing as diagnostic machines.
Chemists have long sought to
develop new reactions for the direct conversion of simple hydrocarbon building blocks into valuable materials such
as pharmaceuticals in a way that dependably creates the same chemical bonds and orientations.
«The National Academy of Sciences recently convened a meeting to look at science missions in CubeSats,» said Bryce Tappan, an explosives
chemist at Los Alamos National Laboratory and lead researcher on the CubeSat Propulsion Concept team, «and identified propulsion
as one of the primary categories of technology that needs to be
developed.»
As organic
chemists developed ways to use «combinatorial approaches» — the ability to synthesize vast libraries of compounds — CADD was declared redundant.
The Nobel committee described the tools
developed by these
chemists as the «world's smallest machines.»
For over 50 years,
chemists have
developed metal - based dye molecules for a wide range of different applications, such
as displays and solar cells.
Currently, the Herlyn Laboratory collaborates with pharmaceutical companies
as well
as academic
chemists and structural biologists to select and further
develop compounds for tumor inhibition.
Using sazetidine - A
as a template, medicinal
chemists developed multiple series of novel ligands with modifications to the pyridine core, azetidine ring, and alkynyl side chain with the objective of designing α4β2 - nAChR partial agonists of high specificity.
In reality, the German
chemist Dr. Hans Goldschmidt accidentally
developed the welding technique of mixing iron oxide and aluminum, otherwise known
as a thermite reaction, while trying to find a way to purify metal ores.
In the 1960s sculpture was pushed into new frontiers
as chemists developed synthetic materials.
Mechanical engineer Shashank Priya along with a team of engineers and
chemists have
developed a new type of flexible solar panel that can absorb both the direct light of sunlight
as well
as the diffuse light of LED, fluorescent and incandescent lighting.
Production
Chemists conduct laboratory research to
develop products obtained through chemical reactions for manufacturing companies, such
as cosmetics.
Analyzing samples from various sources to provide information on compounds, and
developing techniques for analysis purposes are two of my main duties in my current role
as a
chemist.