Open chemistry

This is just a quick blog to mention a thought-provoking article that Peter Murray-Rust wrote for Nature recently, which discusses chemists’ contributions to open-access data and software. The article is now available for free, for a limited period of a month – so if you haven’t seen it, click here to have a look.

I’d love to hear your thoughts about this – do you agree with Peter that all chemistry data and software should be open access?

Andy

Andrew Mitchinson (Associate Editor, Nature)

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Space-hopping materials at the Science Museum

That pretty picture is not a pop-art reworking of stained glass, but a microscopic look at titanium aluminide. The metal is tipped to replace turbine blades in jet engines, offering similar strength but half the density of the current nickel alloy.

It’s one of a set of new materials – some of them tested in space – on show at the Science Museum. The ‘intermetallic’ compounds could be used to create more efficient engines and fuel cells.

The mighty metals are part of the European Space Agency’s IMPRESS project, which conducts experiments on the compounds during short space hops aboard a sounding rocket. (Apparently, you can take more accurate measurements of physical properties in weightless conditions.)

The new display can be found in the museum’s Challenge of Materials, on the first floor.

Image courtest of the Science Museum.

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