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Chemistry

Key Highlights in Medicinal Chemistry this Week

Last updated: March 9, 2026 4:48 pm
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Key Highlights

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Researchers have developed a new method using light-powered chemistry to turn raw arsenic minerals directly into useful chemical building blocks, skipping the dangerous steps that usually make arsenic processing toxic. This breakthrough offers a much safer and more sustainable way to create arsenic-based compounds, which could lead to new medicines and materials.
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A new catalyst that combines copper, nickel, and tungsten on a specially designed titanium surface can steer the chemical reaction that turns harmful nitrate pollution into useful ammonia. This precise control over the reaction pathway is a major step towards cleaning up wastewater and producing valuable chemicals using renewable electricity.
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Scientists have used a machine learning technique that learns on-the-fly to accurately predict the elastic properties of complex aluminum-magnesium-zirconium metal mixtures. This approach dramatically speeds up the discovery of new, stronger metal alloys for applications like aerospace and automotive engineering, without needing lengthy lab experiments for every new recipe.
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A study of a common chemical reaction in a mixed alcohol-water solvent revealed that the transition state—the fleeting, high-energy moment when reactants turn into products—is surrounded by a unique, layered shell of solvent molecules. Understanding this microscopic solvation environment is crucial for designing better solvents to control the speed and outcome of industrial chemical reactions.
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