Archive for the ‘Conferences’ Category

Joint ChemComm–RSC Prizes and Awards Symposium in London

We are delighted to announce the forthcoming ChemComm–RSC Prizes & Awards Symposium in association with the RSC Analytical Division.

Date: Wednesday 22nd February 2012
Location: Imperial College London, UK
Time: 1300-1800

The purpose of this event is to bring together scientists in a stimulating and friendly environment to recognise the achievements of individuals in advancing the chemical sciences and also to foster collaborations. The symposium will appeal to academic and industrial scientists with an interest in analytical science, protein structure and interactions, and biosensors. Attendance at the symposium is FREE OF CHARGE and student participation is strongly encouraged.

The following distinguished scientists have agreed to speak:

For further details and to register your interest, please contact Anne Horan.

***
The closing date for RSC Prizes and Awards 2012 is 15th January 2012. Find out more >
***

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5 days until 100 issues…

….and did you know….?

5 is the number of ChemComm symposia held to date. We’ve brought together scientists in stimulating and friendly environments in Japan, China and Korea to disseminate the latest hot research and foster collaborations between the researchers and the universities involved.

Read Editor Robert Eagling’s blog from this year’s 5th ChemComm Symposium to find out more about his visit to Kyoto, Lanzhou and Nankai.

And stay tuned for news of the next ChemComm symposium, taking place at Imperial College London in February. Preliminary details >

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Chemical Science and ChemComm poster prizes awarded at MASC

Congratulations to Hui-Chen Wang, from the University of Bath, who won the Chemical Science poster prize at the RSC Macrocyclic and Supramolecular Chemistry Meeting in Bath on 19th-20th December 2011. Her poster was entitled ‘New Boronic Acid Based Fluorescence Sensors’. 

Hui-Chen Wang receives the Chemical Science poster prize

Well done also to Eric A. Appel (University of Cambridge) for his poster on ‘Aqueous Supramolecular Materials via Host-Guest Complexation with Cucurbit[8]uril’, for which he was awarded the ChemComm poster prize.

Eric Appel receiving the ChemComm poster prize

Hui-Chen and Eric receive a one-year personal subscription to Chemical Science and ChemComm respectively. Thank you to Paul Raithby, Professor of Inorganic Chemistry at the University of Bath, for awarding the prize certificates.

Did you know…? Paul Raithby has published more than 100 articles in ChemComm. He told me how his research has evolved into ‘making molecular movies’ in his ChemComm interview published in issue 1, 2012.

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ChemComm poster prize awarded at NMR-DG 2011

Congratulations to Rob Evans (University of Manchester, UK) who won the ChemComm poster prize at NMR-DG 2011 Postgraduate Meeting held earlier this summer at the University of Birmingham.

Rob presented his work entitled ‘Predicting Diffusion Coefficients for Small Molecules’. He receives a prize certificate and a one-year print subscription to ChemComm.

Rob Evans receiving his poster prize certificate from Iain Day
Rob Evans receiving his poster prize certificate from Iain Day, who organised the meeting
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2nd Unilever–RSC International Symposium on Functional Materials Science

Register now for attendance at the 2nd Unilever–RSC International Symposium on Functional Materials Science.  The symposium takes place over 3 days at 3 different locations in China. Attendance at any of the meetings is free.

Monday 24 October 2011: Symposium at Tsinghua University, Beijing

Wednesday 26 October: Symposium at Wuhan University, Wuhan 

Friday 28 October: Symposium at Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai

 

Presentations will be delivered by the following international speakers:

  • Prof. Kelly Velonia – University of Crete, Greece
  • Prof. Raffaele Mezzenga – ETH, Switzerland 
  • Prof. Steve Howdle – Nottingham University, UK 
  • Prof. Tom Davis – University of New South Wales, Australia 
  • The symposium will appeal to academic and industrial scientists with an interest in functional materials science. Student participation is also strongly encouraged and each symposium will offer students the opportunity to present their work during a poster session.

    Poster abstract submission deadline is Friday 14th October.

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    Final stop for the ChemComm Symposium

    The international speakers assembled early on Thursday morning to make the final journey to Nankai University, Tianjin. After a flight and a two hour journey on the ChemComm minibus, we arrived at our hotel directly opposite the entrance gates to Nankai University. The first thing that struck us about the hotel was the enormous rooms. I actually got lost in mine between the two bathrooms, the study and the lounge area. Apparently they were all like this – what a hotel!

    After a formal dinner with our host Professor Qilin Zhou (Director of the State Key Laboratory of Elemento-organic Chemistry and member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences), most retired to bed but Professor Rawal, Professor Maruoka and I were taken to a live Chinese comedy show. Lots of clapping with plastic clapping hands, much laughter and, of course, all sketches in Chinese. It was a great experience even if we did not understand anything apart from ‘hello’ and ‘thank you’.

    The following day started with eager anticipation as an audience in excess of 100 watched Professor Feringa give his final scientific presentation on motors and switches. He was followed by local Professor of Energy, Yun Chen, who spoke about some of his latest research into new nanomaterials for batteries, a key challenge with the ever increasing energy demands around the world. Before lunch, Veronique Gouverneur gave her presentation looking at the latest developments in organofluorine chemistry.

    After lunch, the five poster judges took to their duties for one last time with each asked to examine ten posters and select just one. With the final five selected it was left to Professors Feringa and Maruoka to rank the winners. All five received money from the State Key Lab thanks to the generosity of Professor Zhou, plus journal subscriptions and books from the RSC, amongst other things, as additional gifts.

    The scope of the meeting then switched to green chemistry as Professor Buxing Han spoke about his latest research using ionic liquids, supercritical fluids and a mixture of the two as solvents for organic reactions. Professor Han was followed by Professor Rawal who gave his third different talk in five days covering his group’s total synthesis of a member of the Welwitindolinone group of natural products. This was a particularly insightful talk as Professor Rawal not only discussed things that worked but also routes that had failed. There was certainly a good lesson here for total synthesis students, namely things may not always work out but perseverance is the key to success.

    In the last session of the day, Professor Maruoka spoke about some of his latest results in the field of organocatalysis. He was followed by Zhen Yang who gave a second total synthesis masterclass. The retrosynthetic analysis slides certainly gave me a trip down memory lane and the overall synthesis in 26 steps (micrandilactone) showcased the real power of organic chemistry and the creative thought processes needed to succeed.

    After the poster presentations had been made, the speakers and other key faculty members walked to a very famous restaurant called Goubuli for steamed dumplings. They are a local speciality, filled with vegetables, fish and, traditionally, pork. Normally six is enough, but I was proud to exceed the average! The other highlight of the dinner was the stinky tofu, a delicacy providing you can get past the tremendously bad smell, much stronger than the bluest blue cheese. This was a real challenge – the stink was just so bad!

    After dinner, the speakers and faculty members retired to a German bar for one last drink to celebrate the day and the past week. Over the course of the seven days we had travelled many thousand of miles, seen 21 scientific talks covering many different aspects of the chemical sciences, with a total audience close to 700 and nearly 200 posters judged. All in all, it was a great week and the only thing left to do is to thank all the speakers and, of course, the local hosts, without whom none of this would have been possible.

    Robert Eagling

    View the Nankai Symposium schedule

    Related posts:

    ChemComm Symposium heads west…..

    The 5th ChemComm International Symposium gets underway….

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    ChemComm Symposium heads west…..

    A 5am start was always going to be tough, particularly after such a successful event in Kyoto. That said, with cases packed, we headed to Kansai Airport…. next stop Beijing!

    After a three hour flight, the ChemComm International delegation arrived at Beijing International Airport where we had a four hour layover. After lunch, we were joined by the RSC Publisher for China, Dr Daping Zhang, and Professor Keiji Maruoka, the final international speaker for the next two events. The flight to Lanzhou was smooth and, to our delight, we were met by the former director of the Key State Laboratory and member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Professor Yong-Qiang Tu. Following a buffet dinner accompanied by excellent regional red wine, the speakers retired early with one eye on the second symposium

    The following morning, we were greeted at the entrance to Lanzhou University with possibly the largest ChemComm advertising sign I have ever seen. ‘Big’ was certainly the theme of the day, with Professor Wei Wang informing speakers that an audience of around 400 was anticipated with 80 posters to review over lunch.

    Professor Tu opened events and chaired the first session, inviting Professor Xinhe Bao to the stage. Professor Bao gave a beautiful overview on some of his very detailed studies into heterogenous catalysis within nanotubes and other nano-confined systems. Using nobel metals or metals such as iron or nickel, it was shown that the conversation of syngas was much more efficient inside the tube than outside. The subject of the session then switched to metal-free homogenous catalysis, as Professor Maruoka spoke about some of his latest results in the field of organocatalysis. As you would expect, high enatiomeric excesses and yields were the order of the day.

     Following coffee, Professor Veronique Gouverneur gave another whistle-stop tour of her group’s latest organofluorine chemistry and the formation of  C–F bonds using palladium and gold homogenous catalysis.

    As in Kyoto, the speakers worked hard over lunch analysing the 80 posters on show. They covered everything from organic methodology, to total synthesis, organic materials and supramolecular chemistry. If they thought judging them was tough in Kyoto, it proved even more so in Lanzhou! Unfortunately, Professor Ben Feringa was unable to act as a judge, because, due to a last minute laptop crisis, his presentation was being transferred to a spare laptop, with his own laptop in pieces, being fixed by helpful student Mr Woo.

    After lunch, the conference switched gears to total synthesis. Professor Dawei Ma spoke first about the total synthesis of galbulimima alkaloids and communesins. Professor Ma was followed by Professor Viresh Rawal, who gave a different talk to that described in the programme. Professor Rawal described his recent total synthesis of Pederin and Mycalamide B, both part of the Pederin family of natural products isolated from the beetle Paederus fuscipas. He also introduced initial work looking at bioactivity of Mycalamide in cells, carried out with Milan Mrksich

    For the final session, the audience were treated to a masterclass from Ben Feringa on molecular motors and switches. This was only made possible by Mr Woo, who had rebuilt his computer, replacing a transistor, and bingo! His synthetic motors, inspired by nature, are unidirectional with the direction controlled by the enantiomer used. By adding legs, the motors can be bound to gold surfaces and then used to change the orientation of liquid crystal films. A great talk and even Professor Bao, the session Chair, could not bring himself to cut it short. Thank goodness for Mr Woo! The final talk of the day was presented by Professor Deqing Zhang on tetrathiafulvalene-based switchable molecular systems towards functional materials. 

    The evening social events were as memorable as the science, with the speakers joined by 50 or so guests including the vice Dean of Lanzhou University. The Chinese banquet was enhanced with locally produced red wine and Chinese liquor (only to be drunk in multiples of three – Chinese style…kambai). After many toasts and speeches, the speakers were taken to a local pub for some traditional Chinese music. The night was not done, however, as we then moved to a Tibetan bar. The speakers were told to expect local singing and dancing. Little did they know that they would be involved! After being sung to, each speaker was presented with a white Hada. What a great way to end such a action-packed day.

    Next stop Tianjin for the final event of three…..

    Robert Eagling

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    The 5th ChemComm International Symposium gets underway….

    The 5th International ChemComm Symposium got off to an excellent start in Kyoto, Japan, on Monday (16th May) under the Chairmanship of ChemComm Editorial Board member and distinguished Professor Keiji Maruoka (Kyoto University).

    World leading authorities from the USA, UK, the Netherlands, China and Japan arrived on Sunday in time to be treated to a ten course western-style dinner. The dinner was a perfect start to proceedings but even the ten courses could not over-shadow the science that was to follow.

    With an audience in excess of 100, I opened the symposium and thanked the local organisers, speakers and poster presenters. Special thanks were also given to Professor Maruoka for all his support in organising the event. As the first session Chair, Professor Maruoka then got things underway.

    Professor Tsutomu Katsuki (Kyushu University) was up first, speaking initially about oxidation chemistry using ruthenium but then moving, like nature, to iron, for example. He was followed by Professor Kuiling Ding (Shanghai Institute of Organic Chemistry) who gave a talk of two halves, covering his group’s ongoing efforts to overcome the challenging issues in both homogenous and heterogeneous asymmetric catalysis.

    A quick stop for refreshments was followed by Professor Véronique Gouverneur (University of Oxford) who spoke about her ongoing efforts to develop transition metal-catalysed reactions to generate C–F bonds. Not easy, but made even more challenging by the fact that the methods need to be incredibly quick so they can be used to incorporate hot [18F], which has a very short half-life. Such [18F] labelled compounds are used in positron emission tomography.

    Ben Feringa discussed a posterOver lunch, the seven speakers interacted with the 35 poster presenters, putting them through their paces, with the five lucky winners scheduled to be announced at the end of the day.

    The pace of the event did not slow after lunch. Professor Viresh Rawal (University of Chicago) wowed a packed auditorium with some of his latest results using H-bonded systems for asymmetric catalysis. Before the break, Professor Zhengfeng Xi (Peking University) spoke about the synthesis, unique reactivity, cooperative effect and applications of organo-di-lithio reagents.

    The symposium was closed first by Professor Atsuhiro Osuka (Kyoto University), who spoke about some of his beautiful results in the area of Möbius porphrin chemistry, and then by Professor Ben Feringa (University of Groningen). Professor Feringa gave a wonderful overview of some of the ongoing research in his lab exploring chiral space in asymmetric catalysis. Some highlights included the latest examples of C–H and C–C bond formation using monodentate phosphoramidite ligands and also new results in the field of asymmetric catalysis using DNA with his colleague Professor Gerard Roelfes. The later certainly generated a number of interesting questions about the length and sequence requirements of the DNA involved in the reactions.

    symposium speakers, poster prize winners and chairmanAfter the formal poster prize presentations, the speakers and organising committee were treated to a traditional Japanese meal. Before dinner, the historic nature of the Japanese tea ceremony was explained in detail and served to the group by a Maiko (a young training Geiko). Through dinner, the speakers were also treated to some traditional Japanese singing and dancing performed by the Maiko. The music and dance showcased the four seasons of Kyoto.

    The dinner finished with the speakers retiring to bed in preparation for their early flight first to Beijing and then Lanzhou, the next venue for the second of three ChemComm symposia.

    Robert Eagling

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    CASH pictures and poster prize winners

    New year, new start and it seems that the Catalysis and sensing for Health (CASH) meeting got the ball rolling. Held last week at the University of Bath, many delegates travelled across the globe to be there. It seems much fun was had by all and below you can see a small glimpse into what went on…

    Professors Evans, Maruoka and Ishihara enjoying a coffee break in the CASH meeting

    Nothing quite like catching up with friends

    ChemComm Editor Robert Eagling grabbing a cuppa with conference organiser Tony James and ex-ChemComm Associate Editor Andy Evans

    Sir Professor Fraser Stoddart enjoying the Civic Reception at the Roman Baths

    Also, many congratulations to the poster prize winners for the RSC Publishing prizes, who each received an RSC book to help them with their studies:-

    Poster prize winner Shaomin Ji

    Poster prize winner Suying Xu

    The general chemistry team (Chemical Science, ChemComm and Chem Soc Rev) will be attending many conferences this year, so why not take a look at our conference plans and see if our paths will cross during 2011? Alternatively, feel free to contact us for information or help with any other questions or queries.

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    Catalysis and Sensing for Health Symposium

    From the 31st of January to the 2nd February 2011 at The University of Bath, University Hall.

    CASH will be hosting a civic reception at the Roman Baths on the 1st February (from 7pm onwards) that will be free to all delegates.

     

    Catalysis and Sensing for Health (CASH) Symposium is free for delegates from academic and charitable organisations.

    Delegates from Industry are requested to contribute a daily registration fee of £40 for a single day or £60 for the whole conference.

    For further information on the symposium and/or how to register for the event, then please visit the CASH website.

    ChemComm, Chemical Science and Chem Soc Rev Editor, Robert Eagling, will be attending this event so if you would like to arrange a meeting with Robert, please email him at the Editorial Office.

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