Sentences with phrase «says organic chemist»

Using light to affect the spin rate is a clever approach, says organic chemist Harry Gibson of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg.

Not exact matches

«It will allow organic chemists to focus on creating new molecules,» he says.
«I think it's fantastic,» says Leo Paquette, an organic chemist at Ohio State University, Columbus.
Cronin says that removing organic chemists from the mix is another one of his goals.
«Foreign students or workers in the U.S.A. for the first time are frequently disarmed by the informality of research and teaching laboratories,» says Mel Schiavelli, an organic chemist and founding president of Harrisburg University of Science and Technology in Pennsylvania.
Philip Page, an organic chemist at the University of East Anglia, says he will no longer volunteer to peer - review grant proposals for the EPSRC.
«We don't think there's any precedent elsewhere,» says Joseph Sweeney of the University of Reading, an organic chemist who signed the online petition and submitted a letter protesting the EPSRC policy to a London newspaper.
«The situation is very alarming,» says Goverdhan Mehta, an organic chemist and president of the Indian National Science Academy.
«Hydroboration gave organic chemists a procedure to make millions of compounds that were more difficult to make otherwise,» Ramachandran said.
«We had reported a new catalytic reaction in December 2013, to rapidly synthesize triarylmethanes in 3 steps from readily available starting materials, using a palladium catalyst,» says Masakazu Nambo, an organic chemist and another leader of this study.
«If Darwin were around now,» Sutherland says, «maybe he would have been an organic chemist
Past examples of magnetic organic materials were either unstable in air or were mostly made of metal, making them unsuitable for linking together into a plastic, says chemist Robin Hicks of the University of Victoria, British Columbia, lead author of the study reporting the find in this week's Nature.
«The big picture is that [Reed] can now protonate anything,» says Yves Rubin, a physical organic chemist at the University of California, Los Angeles.
«The golden age of synthetic organic chemistry occurred between 1973 and 1987, when chemists began to have the ability to synthesize incredibly complex molecules,» he said.
«Separating americium is very challenging since actinides and fission products, specifically lanthanides, have very similar properties,» said ORNL organic chemist Santa Jansone - Popova, lead author of the study, which was published in the American Chemical Society journal Inorganic Chemistry.
«These encouraging results should serve as a spark for another advancement in organic synthesis,» says K. C. Nicolaou, a synthetic chemist at Rice University, adding that Chematica could increase speed and productivity in chemistry labs, especially if paired with automated synthesis machines.
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