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Nominate a colleague this week: ChemComm Emerging Investigator Lectureships 2014

This week is your last chance to nominate a colleague for the ChemComm Emerging Investigator Lectureships 2014.

Nominate by Friday 6th December 2013

The lectureships recognise emerging scientists in the early stages of their independent academic career. 2014 marks the 50th volume of ChemComm and in celebration of this very special anniversary we will be awarding three ChemComm Emerging Investigator Lectureships next year. So nominate a colleague today! 

To qualify
To be eligible for the ChemComm Emerging Investigator Lectureship, the candidate should have completed their PhD on or after 4th September 2005. The candidate should also have published at least one article in ChemComm during the course of their independent career.  

Award details
The recipient of the award will be invited to present a lecture at three different locations over a 12 month period. It is expected that at least one of the locations will be a conference. The recipient will receive a contribution of £1500 towards travel and accommodation costs. S/he will also be presented with a certificate and be asked to contribute a ChemComm Feature Article. 

Nominations
Those wishing to make a nomination should send the following details to the ChemComm Editorial Office by Friday 6th December 2013:  

  • Recommendation letter, including the name, contact details and website URL of the nominee.  
  • A one page CV for the nominee, including their date of birth, summary of education and career, list of up to five independent publications, total numbers of publications and patents and other indicators of esteem and evidence of independence.
  • A copy of the candidate’s best publication to date (as judged by the nominator).
  • Two supporting letters of recommendation from two independent referees. These should not be someone from the same institution or the candidate’s post doc or PhD supervisor.

The nominator and independent referees are requested to comment on the candidate’s presenting skills.  

Please note that self nomination is not permitted. 

Selection procedure
The ChemComm Editorial Board will draw up a short-list of candidates based on the information provided by the referees and nominator. Short-listed candidates will be asked to provide a supporting statement justifying why they deserve the award. The recipients of the award will then be selected and endorsed by the ChemComm Editorial Board, and will be announced in Spring 2014. 

Previous winners

2013    Professor Louise A. Berben (University of California Davis, USA) for synthetic and physical inorganic chemistry, who will give a plenary lecture at ISACS 13 in Dublin.
2013    Dr Marina Kuimova (Imperial College London, UK) for biophysical chemistry who will give her Lectureship in 2014.
2012 Professor Hiromitsu Maeda (Ritsumeikan University, Japan) – he was presented with his lecture certificate at ICPOC 21.
2011   Dr Scott Dalgarno (Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK) – Find out about his Emerging Investigator Lecture tour in China.
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ChemComm Emerging Investigator Lectureship 2014

We are delighted to invite nominations for ChemComm Emerging Investigator Lectureships 2014. The lectureships, which are awarded annually, will recognise emerging scientists in the early stages of their independent academic career.

2014 marks the 50th volume of ChemComm and in celebration of this very special anniversary we will be awarding three ChemComm Emerging Investigator Lectureships next year. So nominate a colleague today!

To qualify
To be eligible for the ChemComm Emerging Investigator Lectureship, the candidate should have completed their PhD on or after 4th September 2005. The candidate should also have published at least one article in ChemComm during the course of their independent career.

Lectureship details
The recipient of the Lectureship will be invited to present a lecture at three different locations over a 12 month period. It is expected that at least one of the locations will be a conference. The recipient will receive a contribution of £1500 towards travel and accommodation costs. S/he will also be presented with a certificate and be asked to contribute a ChemComm Feature Article.

Nominations
Those wishing to make a nomination should send the following details to the ChemComm Editorial Office by Friday 6th December 2013:

  • Recommendation letter, including the name, contact details and website URL of the nominee.
  • A one page CV for the nominee, including their date of birth, summary of education and career, list of up to five independent publications, total numbers of publications and patents and other indicators of esteem and evidence of independence.
  • A copy of the candidate’s best publication to date (as judged by the nominator).
  • Two supporting letters of recommendation from two independent referees. These should not be someone from the same institution or the candidate’s post doc or PhD supervisor.

The nominator and independent referees are requested to comment on the candidate’s presenting skills.

Please note that self nomination is not permitted.

Selection procedure
The ChemComm Editorial Board will draw up a short-list of candidates based on the information provided by the referees and nominator. Short-listed candidates will be asked to provide a supporting statement justifying why they deserve the Lectureship. The recipients of the Lectureship will then be selected and endorsed by the ChemComm Editorial Board, and will be announced in Spring 2014.

Previous winners

2013 Professor Louise A. Berben (University of California Davis, USA) for synthetic and physical inorganic chemistry, who will give a plenary lecture at ISACS 13 in Dublin.
2013 Dr Marina Kuimova (Imperial College London, UK) for biophysical chemistry who will give her Lectureship in 2014.
2012 Professor Hiromitsu Maeda (Ritsumeikan University, Japan) – he was presented with his lecture certificate at ICPOC 21.
2011 Dr Scott Dalgarno (Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK) – Find out about his Emerging Investigator Lecture tour in China.
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Catalysis and Sensing for our Environment (CASE) Network

The Catalysis and Sensing for our Environment (CASE) network is a group of friends keen to pool their parallel interests to develop novel molecular sensors and catalysts exploiting common underlying interests. Now key members of the CASE network (including Fossey, James, Qian, Jiang and Deng) publish two papers in the current edition of Chemical Communications that take pride of place on the front and back cover.

The front cover article (doi: 10.1039/c3cc43265c) describes catalytic de-borylation in a peroxide sensing regime (model for biological reactive oxygen species), the cover image pays homage to Joseph Priestly, who discovered oxygen in Birmingham, by including the RSC medal bearing his image as a centre piece. The back cover article (doi:10.1039/c3cc43083a) cleverly uses a molecule previously reported in nucleophilic catalysis (Chem. Commun., 2011,47, 10632) and uses it as a sensor for chiral secondary alcohols.

The metallocene containing sensor exists as two diastereoisomers and a surprising finding of this dual catalyst/sensor approach is that the non-catalytically active diastereoisomer is an equally efficient sensor as the catalytically active diastereoisomer. The research described in these papers derives from the close knit CASE collaboration and so the authors have used visual keys linking the front and back cover images, just as the research teams are linked via the CASE Network.

CASE network’s, free to attend, symposia have been held at the University of Bath (UK, 2008), ECUST (China, 2009), the University of Birmingham (UK, 2011), SIOC (Shanghai, 2012), University of Texas at Austin (USA, 2013) and future meetings are planned for Xiamen and Dublin. The CASE symposia have proven to be hot beds for collaborative discussion with numerous papers and successful funding applications resulting from the interactions initiated through the networking opportunities provided by these meetings. The authors gratefully acknowledge the support offered by RSC Journals who have actively supported these meetings, thus fostering the research presented in these two papers.

These two papers embody the ethos and importance of the CASE concept, since they include international collaboration and ideas that are underpinned by the complimentary combination catalysis and sensing.

Both these papers are Open Access and can be read and downloaded for free – find out more about the Royal Society of Chemistry’s Open Access policy:

Front Cover:

“Integrated” and “insulated” boronate-based fluorescent probes for the detection of hydrogen peroxide
Xiaolong Sun, Su-Ying Xu, Stephen E. Flower, John S. Fossey, Xuhong Qian and Tony D. James*
Chem. Commun., 2013, DOI: 10.1039/C3CC43265C

Back Cover:
Colorimetric enantioselective recognition of chiral secondary alcohols via hydrogen bonding to a chiral metallocene containing chemosensor
Su-Ying Xu, Bin Hu, Stephen E. Flower, Yun-Bao Jiang, John S. Fossey, Wei-Ping Deng and Tony D. James*
Chem. Commun., 2013, DOI: 10.1039/C3CC43083A

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ChemComm’s Impact Factor reaches another record high – 6.3

The latest citation data released by Thomson Reuters reveals that ChemComm‘s Impact Factor has risen once again this year to 6.378.

Coupled with fast publication times and great author service, these impressive trends underline the continuing success of ChemComm as the largest publisher of high quality communications within the general chemistry arena.  You can see our most highly cited articles since 2010 listed below.

Thank you to all who have contributed to the journal’s success so far – our authors, referees, readers and Editorial and Advisory Boards – we are very grateful for your support.

We invite you to submit your next urgent Communication to ChemComm.

Find out how other Royal Society of Chemistry journals are ranked in the latest Impact Factor release

Top cited ChemComm articles:

Feature Articles

Pd-catalyzed oxidative coupling with organometallic reagents via C–H activation
Author(s): Chang-Liang Sun, Bi-Jie Li and Zhang-Jie Shi

Gas storage in porous metal–organic frameworks for clean energy applications
Author(s): Shengqian Ma and Hong-Cai Zhou

Porous metal–organic frameworks as platforms for functional applications
Author(s): Hai-Long Jiang and Qiang Xu

Lighting porphyrins and phthalocyanines for molecular photovoltaics
Author(s): M. Victoria Martínez-Díaz, Gema de la Torre and Tomás Torres

Application of d6 transition metal complexes in fluorescence cell imaging
Author(s): Vanesa Fernández-Moreira, Flora L. Thorp-Greenwood and Michael P. Coogan

Percent buried volume for phosphine and N-heterocyclic carbene ligands: steric properties in organometallic chemistry
Author(s): Hervé Clavier and Steven P. Nolan

Organic photovoltaics: a chemical approach
Author(s): Juan Luis Delgado, Pierre-Antoine Bouit, Salvatore Filippone, M a Ángeles Herranz and Nazario Martín

Communications

Reduction of graphene oxide via L-ascorbic acid
Author(s): Jiali Zhang, Haijun Yang, Guangxia Shen, Ping Cheng, Jingyan Zhang and Shouwu Guo

Silicon nanoparticles–graphene paper composites for Li ion battery anodes
Author(s): Jeong K. Lee, Kurt B. Smith, Cary M. Hayner and Harold H. Kung

Highly selective and ultrasensitive detection of Hg2+ based on fluorescence quenching of Au nanoclusters by Hg2+–Au+ interactions
Author(s): Jianping Xie, Yuangang Zheng and Jackie Y. Ying

*The Impact Factor provides an indication of the average number of citations per paper. Produced annually, Impact Factors are calculated by dividing the number of citations in a year, by the number of citeable articles published in the preceding two years. Data based on 2012 Journal Citation Reports®, (Thomson Reuters, 2013).

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Announcing the ChemComm Emerging Investigators issue 2014

Following the overwhelming postive response from the community to the 2011, 2012 and 2013 ChemComm Emerging Investigators issues, we are delighted to announce the forthcoming 2014 Emerging Investigators issue.

If you are interested in submitting to the issue please contact the ChemComm Editorial Office in the first instance. Please note that authors must not have featured in a previous ChemComm Emerging Investigators issue. The deadline for submission is 1 October 2013.

This annual issue is dedicated to profiling the very best research from scientists in the early stages of their independent careers from across the chemical sciences. We hope to feature principal investigators whose work has the potential to influence future directions in science or result in new and exciting developments.

Browse the 2013 Emerging Investigators issue

Find out more about the ChemComm Emerging Investigator Lectureship – awarded annually to exceptional scientists in the early-stage of their independent career

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ChemComm-RSC Prizes and Awards Symposium: Supramolecular Chemistry

Last month we were delighted to hold a ChemComm-RSC Prizes and Awards Symposium on supramolecular chemistry at Trinity College Dublin, Ireland. The free one-day event was a great success, with over 160 delegates and a fantastic programme featuring RSC Award winners and leaders in the field.

CC supramolecular symposium

Speakers from the ChemComm-RSC Prizes and Awards Symposium on Supramolecular Chemistry, 24 May 2013, Dublin, Ireland

Speakers included:

  • Jerry Atwood, University of Missouri-Columbia – Winner of the 2012 RSC Supramolecular Award
  • John Callan, University of Ulster
  • Chris Chang, University of California, Berkeley – Winner of the 2012 RSC Chemistry of Transition Metals Award
  • Sylvia Draper, Trinity College Dublin
  • Phil Gale, University of Southampton – ChemComm sponsored lecture
  • David Leigh, University of Manchester – ChemComm sponsored lecture
  • Donal O’Shea, University College Dublin
  • Susan Quinn, University College Dublin
  • Eoin Scanlon, Trinity College Dublin
  • Jonathan Steed, Durham University – ChemComm sponsored lecture

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ChemComm Emerging Investigators Issue 2013

Front coverWe are delighted to announce the publication of the 2013 ChemComm Emerging Investigators issue.

This is the third edition of this themed collection and we have been overwhelmed by the community’s positive response. I encourage you to take a look at the exceptional communications and feature reviews in this issue, as well as our previous issues in 2011 and 2012.

The issue contains over 90 Communications as well as a selection of Feature review articles, take a look at the whole collection today.

We invite you to submit your next communication article to ChemComm.

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Simple synthesis of heavy oxygen-labelled alcohols

Rozen and co-workers report a novel and extremely simple method for synthesising 18O-labelled alcohols using commercial boronic acids and a reagent prepared from elemental fluorine.

Alcohols labelled with 18O are very valuable as biological probes for a variety of studies which are often limited by the availability of labelled precursors for use in the synthesis of the compounds of interest.

Scientists in Israel prepared an 18O-labelled acetonitrile complex of hypofluorous acid by simply bubbling dilute F2 through acetonitrile and 18O-labelled water. They performed a series of reactions of this complex with a variety of aliphatic and aromatic boronic acids at room temperature to produce a series of 18O-labelled alcohols within just a few minutes and in excellent yields – generally upwards of 90 per cent.

Read this ‘HOT’ ChemComm Communication for free:

The first general route for efficient synthesis of 18O labelled alcohols using the HOF⋅CH3CN complex
Shlomo Rozen, Julia Luria and Inna Vints
Chem. Commun., 2013, Accepted Manuscript
DOI: 10.1039/C3CC42337A

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ChemComm Emerging Investigator Lectureship 2013: Winners Announced

louise

Louise Berben

On behalf of the ChemComm Editorial Board we are delighted to announce the winners of the ChemComm Emerging Investigator Lectureship 2013.

Marina Kuimova

Marina Kuimova

This year we received a high number of excellent nominations and therefore the Editorial Board have decided to award two Emerging Investigator Lectureships in 2013. The winners are Professor Louise A. Berben (University of California Davis, USA) and Dr Marina Kuimova (Imperial College London).

This annual lectureship recognises an emerging scientist in the early stages of their independent academic career.

The Editorial Board commended Louise’s contributions to the field of synthetic and physical inorganic chemistry, and Marina was awarded the lectureship for her excellent work within biophysical chemistry. Further details of the two Lectureships, including lecture locations, will be announced soon.

To find out more about the winners’ research, read some of their latest articles in ChemComm:

Redox active aluminium(III) complexes convert CO2 into MgCO3 or CaCO3 in a synthetic cycle using Mg or Ca metal
Thomas W. Myers and Louise A. Berben
Chem. Commun., 2013, DOI: 10.1039/C2CC37208H

Simple routes to bulky silyl-substituted acetylide ligands and examples of V(III), Fe(II), and Mn(II) complexes
Gereon M. Yee, Kristin Kowolik, Shuhei Manabe, James C. Fettinger and Louise A. Berben
Chem. Commun., 2011,47, 11680-11682, DOI: 10.1039/C1CC14758G

Reactive oxygen species in photochemistry of the red fluorescent protein “Killer Red”
Russell B. Vegh, Kyril M. Solntsev, Marina K. Kuimova, Soohee Cho, Yue Liang, Bernard L. W. Loo, Laren M. Tolbert and Andreas S. Bommarius
Chem. Commun., 2011,47, 4887-4889, DOI: 10.1039/C0CC05713D

Also of interest: You can now browse the 2013 Emerging Investigators Issue – which features research from outstanding up-and-coming scientists

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ChemComm-RSC Prizes and Awards Symposium: Supramolecular Chemistry

We invite you to join us for the ChemComm-RSC Prizes and Awards Symposium which will be taking place on 24 May 2013 in Dublin, Ireland.

This free one-day event will comprise of stimulating lectures reflecting the academic and industrial breadth of supramolecular chemistry, delivered by RSC Prize and Award winners and leaders in the field.

Confirmed Speakers:

  • Jerry Atwood, University of Missouri-Columbia – Winner of the 2012 RSC Supramolecular Award
  • John Callan, University of Ulster
  • Chris Chang, University of California, Berkeley – Winner of the 2012 RSC Chemistry of Transition Metals Award
  • Sylvia Draper, Trinity College Dublin
  • Phil Gale, University of Southampton – ChemComm sponsored lecture
  • David Leigh, University of Manchester – ChemComm sponsored lecture
  • Donal O’Shea, University College Dublin
  • Susan Quinn, University College Dublin
  • Eoin Scanlon, Trinity College Dublin
  • Jonathan Steed, Durham University – ChemComm sponsored lecture

We hope you and your colleagues will be able to attend the ChemComm-RSC Prizes and Awards Symposium. For further information about this event and to register, please visit the dedicated webpage.

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