Archive for September, 2010

Hydrogen Interactions with Diamond: call for papers

PCCP high-profile themed issue announcement:

Hydrogen Interactions with Diamond

Submission deadline: 10 January 2010

Guest Editors: John Foord (University of Oxford) and Alon Hoffman (Technion Inst.)

Enormous interest has developed in the use of diamond as a functional material in recent years, with diverse applications in areas like optical windows, radiation detectors, thermal dissipation, high power electronics, NEMS, medical implants, electrochemistry, bioelectronics and biosensors. This in turn has focussed attention on understanding the basic physical, chemical, mechanical and interfacial properties of diamond materials, in a research field that spans physics, chemistry, materials science and biology. One of the central themes in this basic research is the interaction of hydrogen with diamond.

The purpose of this themed issue is therefore to bring important areas of this large body of research together in an issue of PCCP, which will focus on the basic physical science which underlies the interaction of hydrogen with diamond materials and will cover specific areas including:

  • Chemistry and structure of hydrogenated diamond surfaces
  • The role of hydrogen in growth chemistry
  • Electronic structure of diamond interfaces
  • Surface conductivity
  • Electron emission and Photoemission
  • Hydrogen plasma smoothing and etching
  • Electrochemistry
  • Diffusion
  • Hydrogen Defects in Diamond
  • Bulk electronic and optical properties


The themed issue will be published in summer 2011 and will be displayed at relevant conferences to maximise the visibility of the work published.

Please pass this information on to any relevant colleagues, or let us know if you have any suggestions of people to invite. The deadline for submissions to the themed issue is the 10th January 2011, though submissions before this date are of course welcomed.



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Ionisable solutes partition into octanol

‘HOT’ PCCP article – read it now:

This paper looks at ionisable solutes partition into octanol as ions and ion pairs, they discover that log P for a neutral species and the ion is not constant.

The transfer of neutral molecules, ions and ionic species from water to wet octanol
Michael H. Abraham and William E. Acree, Jr.
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2010, DOI: 10.1039/C0CP00695E

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Kinetics of solid oxide fuel cells

Read this just published PCCP Perspective article by Wolfgang Bessler and colleagues:

Model anodes and anode models for understanding the mechanism of hydrogen oxidation in solid oxide fuel cells
Wolfgang G. Bessler, Marcel Vogler, Heike Störmer, Dagmar Gerthsen, Annika Utz, André Weber and Ellen Ivers-Tiffée
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2010, DOI: 10.1039/C0CP00541J

This article reviews and presents new results on mechanistic modeling and experimental analysis of the kinetics of SOFC anodes.

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Water in biological systems – issue out this week

cover imageIssue 35 is part of the PCCP themed issues series on biophysics and biophysical chemistry and contains a collection of articles on the theme ‘Water in biological systems, including a Perspective article on the evolution of DNA and a paper on the kinetic spectroscopy of hemoglobin by Robert Goldbeck:

The possible roles of water in the prebiotic chemical evolution of DNA
Shuxun Cui
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2010, 12, 10147-10153

Kinetic spectroscopy of heme hydration and ligand binding in myoglobin and isolated hemoglobin chains: an optical window into heme pocket water dynamics
Robert A. Goldbeck et al.
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2010, 12, 10270-10278

Read more about the PCCP biophysics and biophysical chemistry series, with the following issues already available:

•    Biomolecular structures: from isolated molecules to living cells
•    Molecular Mechanisms of the Photostability of Life

Also, you can submit to our upcoming ‘Nano-bio’ themed issue before the 06 December 2010.

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