Chemistry
in sentence
1039 examples of Chemistry in a sentence
To figure out the elegant recipes that would take the small subset of the periodic table, and create miracle materials like that cell, is the task of green
chemistry.
In fact, when they put it into the jawbone, it could integrate into the jaw, and we know now with very sophisticated imaging technologies that part of that integration comes from the fact that this material is designed in a very specific way, has a beautiful chemistry, has a beautiful architecture.
And actually we know that those cells in the body, in the embryo, as they develop can form a different kind of tissue, cartilage, and so we developed a gel that was slightly different in nature and slightly different chemistry, put it in there, and we were able to get 100 percent cartilage instead.
We still need chemistry, we still need mechanics, we still need really interesting topography, and we still need really interesting ways to surround the cells.
Now I'm a global ecologist and an Earth explorer with a background in physics and
chemistry
and biology and a lot of other boring subjects, but above all, I'm obsessed with what we don't know about our planet.
In fact, my love of science itself began when my parents bought me a slime
chemistry
set and was then only enhanced by doing gross experiments in my sixth-grade biology class.
The big deal was he happened to have won the Nobel prize for ozone
chemistry.
And you move from a discipline of engineering, you move from a discipline of chemistry, into a discipline of biology.
What really started to change in agriculture is when you started moving from this brute force engineering and
chemistry
into biology, and that's where you get your productivity increases.
Life can emerge from physics and chemistry, plus a lot of accidents.
This included software algorithms to predict what DNA to build,
chemistry
to link the G, A, T and C building blocks of DNA into short pieces, Gibson Assembly to stitch together those short pieces into much longer ones, and biology to convert the DNA into other biological entities, such as proteins.
I built an interactive
chemistry
exhibit at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, and this exhibit lets people use physical objects to grab chemical elements off of the periodic table and bring them together to cause chemical reactions to happen.
There's a great phrase that Sherwood Rowland, who won the Nobel Prize for the
chemistry
that led to ozone depletion, when he was accepting his Nobel Prize, he asked this question: "What is the use of having developed a science well enough to make predictions if, in the end, all we're willing to do is stand around and wait for them to come true?"
Except, in my case, you'd realize you have no
chemistry
and so now, you're back to square one.
I'd studied thousands of hours of physics, biology, chemistry, but not one hour, not one concept on how to mentor, how to guide someone to go together into the unknown, about motivation.
Genetic engineering and bioengineering are creating a whole bunch of great new opportunities for chemistry, for computation, for memory.
We've got this wonderful, great chain of explanation, we're used to it, where physics explains chemistry,
chemistry
explains biology, biology explains parts of psychology.
I was in the
chemistry
sequence for science majors, and boy did I not belong.
Freeman Dyson, in a TED Talk, foresaw that children will design and create new organisms just as routinely as his generation played with
chemistry
sets.
Now, what was extraordinary here is not just that they beat all of the algorithms developed by Merck or the international academic community, but nobody on the team had any background in
chemistry
or biology or life sciences, and they did it in two weeks.
Our approach is to use some standard knowledge in polymer
chemistry
to harness light and oxygen to grow parts continuously.
In addition, we're able to throw the entire polymer
chemistry
textbook at this, and we're able to design chemistries that can give rise to the properties you really want in a 3D-printed object.
And when you look at the Earth, very far away from any sunlight, deep in the ocean, you have life thriving and it uses only
chemistry
for life processes.
Life
chemistry
takes a long time to actually happen.
Can
chemistry
permit making these really large molecules where we've never been before?
It takes pharmaceutical
chemistry
10 years to derive a new drug.
With the power of synthetic
chemistry
and molecular biology and just under 20 years of work, we created bacteria with six-letter DNA.
We've made molecules that work right alongside the natural ones, and I think that suggests that any molecules that obey the fundamental laws of
chemistry
and physics and you can optimize them could do the things that the natural molecules of life do.
If we imagine quantum mechanics or quantum physics, then, as the fundamental foundation of reality itself, then it's not surprising that we say quantum physics underpins organic
chemistry.
Organic chemistry, scaled up in complexity, gives us molecular biology, which of course leads to life itself.
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