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ACS Central Science: A Conversation with Ting Zhu

Posted on July 17, 2018 by Mark Peplow

This chemical biologist is building the mirror image of nature’s molecular machinery.

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← Nature: The Flint water crisis: how citizen scientists exposed poisonous politics
Chemical & Engineering News: Lights, camera, reaction! →
  • Highlights

    • C&EN: Lighting a better path for biobased furans

      16 January 2026

      Photocatalytic hydrolysis offers a shortcut for renewable chemicals.

    • C&EN: Gas looping boosts efficiency of carbon nanotube production

      22 December 2025

      Methane pyrolysis reactor recycles process gases to improve output of nanotubes and hydrogen.

    • C&EN: Enhanced rock weathering shows little climate benefit in large trial

      18 December 2025

      3-year Swiss study underscores the importance of site selection to maximize CO2 sequestration.

    • Nature Nanotechnology: Brain–computer interfaces race to the clinic

      12 December 2025

      Advances in materials science, microelectronics and semiconductor manufacturing are helping these devices to benefit patients.

    • C&EN: Europium complex harvests ambient energy to power minirobots

      20 November 2025

      Inchworms can stroll for hours using scraps of heat from the environment.

  • TESTIMONIALS

    “As an editor and reporter, Mark Peplow is fast, accurate, and versatile. He covers science policy and pure research with equal passion, and his writing combines a scientist’s precision with a journalist’s verve.” Tim Appenzeller
    Former Chief Magazine Editor at Nature, now News Editor at Science
    "Mark guided me through some of the most challenging stories I've written. These are pieces I might not have attempted were it not for his steady editorial hand." Linda Nordling
    Freelance Journalist, South Africa
    “Working with Mark is never anything other than a pleasure. He is the kind of editor that writers hope for: able to identify what needs fixing and what doesn’t, bringing to bear a wealth of knowledge, always clear, prompt and easy to talk with. Much of that comes from being a splendid writer himself.”
    Philip Ball
    Freelance Science Writer