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C&EN: Skeletal edit swaps carbon for nitrogen →

Short Cuts: Science

Posted on October 21, 2023 by Mark Peplow

Navigate your way through fifty of the biggest ideas in science, with this handy guidebook.

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← C&EN: A shocking way to produce hydrogen from plastic waste
C&EN: Skeletal edit swaps carbon for nitrogen →
  • Highlights

    • C&EN: Crystals defy their symmetry to discern chiral light

      24 June 2025

      Centrosymmetric crystals have always absorbed equal amounts of left- and right-handed circularly polarized light—until now.

    • C&EN: Magnetic stirrers linked to issues with reproducing chemistry results

      17 June 2025

      From the lab that found impurities on your stir bar—your flask’s placement on a stirrer plate can mess with your reaction too.

    • C&EN: ‘Perplexanes’ achieve mind-bending molecular topology

      10 June 2025

      Zirconium helps to weave entangled nanocarbon cages in high yields.

    • C&EN: Atom-thin iodine film makes its debut

      29 May 2025

      Iodinene is the first halogen analog of graphene and is expected to be unusually metallic.

    • C&EN Talented 12: Sascha Feldmann

      23 May 2025

      Commanding charged particles and light for energy efficiency.

  • 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