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Latest highlights

Cover story

3D printing

Article by Cronin et al.FREE

A low-cost 3D printer is used to combine chemical reactions and the reactor to produce an active 'reactionware' system for organic and inorganic synthesis. Active elements such as catalysts can be incorporated into the walls of printed reactors, and other printed-in components that enable electrochemical and spectroscopic analysis can also be included.

News and Views by Johnson

Advance online publication

Polymer chemistry

Article by O'Reilly et al.

Nature synthesizes proteins and nucleic acids by polymerization methods that use well-regulated and segregated templates. Now, synthetic block-copolymer templates have been designed to assemble in a biomimetic fashion to segregate, and thus control, the synthetic radical polymerization of complementary nucleobase-containing vinyl monomers, to yield high-molecular-weight, low-polydispersity polymer chains.


Advance online publication

Proton conduction

Article by Vilčiauskas et al.

Proton transport in phosphate-based systems is important in biology and clean energy technologies, and phosphoric acid, being the best known intrinsic proton conductor, represents an important model. Ab initio molecular dynamics simulations now reveal that the interplay between extended, polarized, hydrogen-bonded chains and a frustrated hydrogen-bond network gives rise to the high conductivity in liquid phosphoric acid.


Advance online publication

Self-assembled nanowires

Article by Faramarzi et al.

Triarylamine derivatives in solution have been self-assembled into organic nanowires between two electrodes, under white-light irradiation and in the presence of a voltage. The resulting fibres possess a very high electric conductivity as well as a metallic behaviour when cooled down to a temperature of 1.5 K.



Current issue

Main-group chemistry

Article by Li et al.

Heavier analogues of ketones — containing a double bond between a group 14 element and oxygen — have so far not been isolated as stable compounds. Now, a stable monomeric germanone with a highly polarized Ge=O double bond has been isolated, stabilized by rigid bulky ligands.

News & Views by Power

Current issue

Amyloid formation

Article by Zanni et al.

Molecular inhibitors of amyloid formation could help combat Alzheimer's disease, type 2 diabetes, and other major human diseases. Here, two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy and residue-specific isotope labelling are used to obtain detailed structural information on amyloid-inhibitor complexes. The unexpected behaviour observed helps to explain the moderate activity of the inhibitor studied.

News & Views Cho


Current issue

Protein arrays

Article by Tezcan et al.

The self-assembly of proteins into ordered yet dynamic nanoscale architectures is a crucial biological process and an inspiration for supramolecular chemistry, but has remained largely inaccessible synthetically. A monomeric protein has now been prepared that assembles with zinc ions into one-, two- and three-dimensional crystalline arrays with nano- and microscale order.

News & Views by Sinclair

Current issue

Asymmetric catalysis

Article by Sigman et al.

Many parameters have been designed to describe steric size, but few have been able to explain consistently the selectivity of asymmetric catalytic reactions. Here, Sterimol parameters — originally used to develop quantitative structure–activity relationships in medicinal chemistry — have been used to quantify enantioselectivity in a diverse collection of asymmetric catalytic reactions.

News & Views by Miller





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