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| Article 1 to 7 out of 7 concerning University of Leeds
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Leeds researchers reshape the future of drug discovery
(20 Nov 2008)
Scientists in Leeds have devised a new way to create the next generation of man-made molecules in a breakthrough that could revolutionise drug development. Creating new drugs to combat disease and illness requires the completion of a complex 3D ...
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Introducing the next generation of chemical reactors
(23 Sep 2008)
Unique nanostructures which respond to stimuli, such as pH, heat and light will pave the way for safer, greener and more efficient chemical reactors. Being developed by a consortium of UK universities, the nanostructures can regulate reactions, ...
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New synthetic route to oxindoles
(12 Aug 2008)
Peter Kündig and colleagues from Geneva University, Switzerland and Stephen Marsden and co-workers at the University of Leeds, in the UK, have developed an asymmetric Pd/N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) - catalysed intramolecular -arylation of amide ...
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Leeds research brings terahertz closer to everyday use
(01 Apr 2008)
A collaboration between the Universities of Leeds and Harvard has turned the heat up on terahertz technology, bringing a handheld terahertz device a step closer to reality. The Leeds team, led by Professors Edmund Linfield and Giles Davies from the ...
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Greener extraction of one of nature's whitest minerals
(13 Feb 2008)
From medicine to make-up, plastics to paper - hardly a day goes by when we don't use titanium dioxide. Now researchers at the University of Leeds have developed a simpler, cheaper and greener method of extracting higher yields of one of this most ...
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Leeds researchers fuelling the 'hydrogen economy'
(29 Nov 2007)
Scientists at the University of Leeds are turning low-grade sludge into high-value gas in a process which could make eco-friendly biodiesel even greener and more economical to produce. Biodiesel - motor fuel derived from vegetable oil - is a ...
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A mineral provides the template: peptides assemble into arrays of flat nanotapes on mica surfaces
(07 Mar 2005)
Composite materials are catching on in technological applications. Take for example the hybrid structures of metal and plastics that are incorporated into many components of our cars. Nature also frequently works with an interesting class of ...
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