WebElements Chemistry Nexus
This is the WebElements Chemistry Nexus. In particular, the Nexus features the following:
- Chemistry in the news
- Chemistry Forums
- Chemistry Blogs
- Chemistry News and Journal aggregators from around the world
as well as other features. Anyone can read the articles here but we should really like you to participate by commenting upon the news stories, the blogs, and of course by getting involved in the forums. To do this you need to create an account and log in.

WebElements new version
Submitted by WebElements on 13 May 2008 - 1:56pm.I have restructured WebElements. The restructuring is all style at the front-end and reorganisation at the back-end, meaning all the errors in data are still there but they are displayed more beautifully and efficiently. Fixing some of those errors is now a priority.
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Element 122?
Submitted by WebElements on 30 April 2008 - 9:13am.Hard to know what to make of this as it is not my field. But here is a claim for element 122, or maybe 124, detection in thorium by a mass spectrometric method. The authors have claimed previously the observation of very heavy isotopes, for instance Rg isotopes in the mass spectra of natural gold (http://arxiv.org/abs/nucl-ex/0702051).
Full reference
Some more uses for Erbium
Submitted by Lanfeast on 20 April 2008 - 4:52pm.I would like to add that Erbium is used as a dopant in optical fiber amplifier for telecom wavelength (1500-1600 nm).
It is also used with a much more concentration in optical fibers for fibre laser.
photon producing
Submitted by Pu94242 on 28 February 2008 - 4:20am.I was wondering if any one out there could tell me a efficient way to produce photons. I want to produce lithium from beryllium [photon+Be=Li+H]. I know you can produce neutrons with aluminium or beryllium and a alpha emitter but I can not find a way to excite atoms to produce photons. I know if you run a electric arc across mecury vapor which discharge ultraviolet photons I'm wondering if these will do the same thing as normal photons if not what will.
The table in a bathroom
Submitted by Anonymous on 25 December 2007 - 11:59pm.
Noble Prize 2007 for chemistry
Submitted by WebElements on 10 October 2007 - 10:56am.Modern surface chemistry – fuel cells, artificial fertilizers and clean exhaust
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2007 to Gerhard Ertl of the Fritz-Haber-Institut der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Berlin, Germany "for his studies of chemical processes on solid surfaces".

2007 Ig Nobel Chemistry prize announced
Submitted by WebElements on 5 October 2007 - 5:15pm.The 2007 Ig Nobel Chemistry prize winner was Mayu Yamamoto (International Medical Centre of Japan) for developing a way to extract vanillin (vanilla fragrance and flavour) from cow dung. The 2007 Ig Nobel Prize winners were announced 5th October 2007 and prizes prizes awarded at Harvard in America. To celebrate, a local ice cream bar put on a tasting session of a new flavour, Yum-A-Moto Vanilla Twist, concocted in honour of the 2007 Ig Nobel Chemistry Prize winner Mayu Yamamoto. The mind boggles.
Translation
Submitted by Franc on 5 October 2007 - 5:47am.I've translated the contents of hydrogenium and helium into simplified Chinese from your site but not published on anywhere. I want to get the permission from the author in order to submit it on the Internet. Could I?
The attachment is able to be downloaded, but you should change the extensions into ".zip" before you open it.

Periodic Table Quilt
Submitted by WebElements on 4 October 2007 - 7:18pm.Quite by chance I noticed that at Simon Fraser University in Canada members of staff in the Department got together to make a periodic table quilt. Looks to be about 6 feet across. I wonder if it will be updated for the latest elements?

If you go to the SFU site, click on any element to see that panel in more detail. Anyone else made a quilt like this?
