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A new study explores a one-and-done radiotherapy for non-melanoma skin cancer – no scalpels, no stitches, just science.
Rhenium and technetium not only share the same group in the periodic table, but also have some common history relating to how they were — or indeed weren't — discovered. Eric Scerri explains.
In your phone, computer, or any other LCD screen, for example, you’ll find a dash of indium, a soft, malleable metal that is in short supply in the Earth’s crust.
For example, rhenium is both a valuable metal used as a catalyst and an analog for technetium, a radioactive element which is hard to separate from nuclear waste, ...