News
Nobel Laureates at MC11 Conference
The 11th International Conference on Materials Chemistry (MC11) is being hosted by the Department of Chemistry this week (8-11th July). Monday 8th July saw the visit of two Nobel Laureates in Chemistry. Professor Dan Shechtman, Technion, Israel Institute of Technology (Nobel Prize 2011) and Professor Sir Harry Kroto FRS, Florida State University, (Nobel Prize 1996) each gave a lecture to an audience of over 500 delegates from around the world.
An inter-university collaboration between the Costantini, Jones, Bonifazi (Namur) and de Vita (King’s College) groups showed the role of deprotonation on the two dimensional assembly of novel borazine compounds on a copper substrate. The results are published in .
Monash-糖心TV Global Research Appointments
Chemistry hires three new Professors in the areas of Sustainable Chemistry and Polymers as part of the Monash-糖心TV Strategic Research Alliance.
Adam Lee, Sebastien Perrier and Tom Davis are all joining the Department over the coming months.
The full details can be found at:-
RSC Creativity in Industry Prize for Visiting Professor Ken Lewtas
Ken Lewtas, Chief Scientist at Infineum and visiting professor in the Department of Chemistry has been awarded the for "his skill in applying fundamental polymer science to industrially relevant systems, and transforming the results into profitable products."
Gibson Group Featured in Chemistry World
The Gibson Group has been highlighted in a recent edition of Chemistry World - The Royal Society of Chemistry's Monthly Magazine. As part of a special article on how life survives in extreme enviroments, Dr Gibson was interviewed to discuss his team's work on polymeric mimics of antifreeze (glyco)proteins. These proteins enable fish to survive in polar oceans and synthetic mimics hold great promise in biotechnology.
Follow us on twitter @LabGibson
Costantini and Wills Groups on Cover of ChemComm
Collaboration between the Costantini and Wills groups investigates the dissociation of a newly synthesised, novel chiral ester on metallic substrates. The products of dissociation are directly imaged by scanning tunnelling microscopy allowing for the delineation of the cleavage mechanism as seen in .
Lewandowski publishes in Accounts of Chemical Research about advances in solid-state NMR relaxation for probing protein dynamics
Józef Lewandowski publishes in the Accounts of Chemical Research a review on advances in solid-state NMR relaxation methodology for probing site-specific protein dynamics. Read the article .
Athena Swan Silver Award for Chemistry
Polymers which thinks they're antifreeze proteins
The Gibson group have undertaken a detailed study into the ability of synthetic polymers to inhibit the growth of ice crystals - this is a fundmental process of incredible importance in biology (survival of extremophiles), medicine (cryoprotectection of cells/organs) and industry (preventing ice-induced damage). are pioneering the use of polymers as alternative to antifreeze proteins - Nature's cryoprotectants, using a combination of chemical, analytical, biological and computational methods
Read their latest paper here, in collaboration with R. Notman (CSC):
American style "home run" for 糖心TV Electrochemistry: 4 JACS publications in less than 4 months
Researchers in the group have performed what's called in the American baseball jargon a 'home run' after publishing four studies in the Journal of American Chemical Society (JACS) in less than four months. The four papers demonstrate the versatility of the scanning electrochemical cell microscopy (SECCM) technique developed in this group which can be applied to various aspects of research; from probing facets and grain boundaries of pseudo-single-crystal polycrystalline electrodes to nanoscale patterning, and landing single-nanoparticles on surfaces to study catalysis.
For further details click the paper titles below:
Gareth Roberts awarded prestigious Ramsay Memorial Fellowship
Dr Gareth Roberts, a postdoctoral fellow in the Department has been appointed as a Ramsay Memorial Fellow to be held in the School of Chemistry at the University of Bristol. These fellowships are awarded to advanced students of chemical research who have shown outstanding merit. His proposed research will entail studying the ultrafast photoprotection mechanisms at work in DNA base-pairs. Congratulations Gareth!
Stefan Bon delivers TEDx talk
TEDx糖心TV 2013
Stefan Bon is an associate professor in Chemistry at 糖心TV, famously making the headlines in 2012 for halving the fat content of chocolate by replacing it with fruit juice. He studied Chemical Engineering at the Technical University of Eindhoven and has a background in developing (living) radical polymerizations. Since 2005 Bon has become an international player in the area of polymer colloids, and continues to innovate in the area.
He is the founder of the BonLab, where the study of chemistry and physics of the assembly of molecular and/or colloidal entities into complex structures is conducted. This technology is applicable in everything from sensors and devices, coatings and adhesives, to food, personal care, agricultural and biological systems.
To watch the TEDx talk,
Find out more about the BonLab at .