Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Hydrogen Storage Materials: Faraday Discussions 151 published online

CoverFaraday Discussions 151: Hydrogen Storage Materials has now been published online

Take a look at this exciting volume today which covers the following themes:

  • Theory and spectroscopic methods to understand hydrogenation/dehydrogenation mechanisms
  • Novel approaches: hydrogenation/dehydrogenation of organic molecules, encapsulation of nanosized materials
  • Chemical hydrogen
  • Adsorbed/physisorbed hydrogen on or in MOFs and other materials with large surface area
  • Applications including uses for automotives and novel battery materials

Highlights from the volume include:

Performance of a metal hydride store on the “Ross Barlow” hydrogen powered canal boat
A. I. Bevan, A. Züttel, D. Book and I. R. Harris
Faraday Discuss., 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C0FD00025F

Performance of a full-scale hydrogen-storage tank based on complex hydrides
Terry A. Johnson, Scott W. Jorgensen and Daniel E. Dedrick
Faraday Discuss., 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C0FD00017E

Hydrogen as a fuel for today and tomorrow: expectations for advanced hydrogen storage materials/systems research
Katsuhiko Hirose, Introductory Lecture
Faraday Discuss., 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C1FD00099C

Read about the conference highlights and see photos from the meeting.

You can purchase this volume as an individual book through our website.

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PCCP Poster Prize at Free Radicals Symposium

PCCP was delighted to sponsor the 31st Symposium on Free Radicals, held last week in Port Douglas, Australia, where a PCCP student Poster Prize was awarded.

The symposium was chaired by Evan Bieske and Scott Kable and around 100 scientific participants attended the meeting, along with their families. The strong scientific activity was reflected through 35 talks and 60 poster presentations. The meeting had 80 scientists from Japan, Taiwan, USA and Europe, and around 20 from Australia.

Congratulations to James Ge who was awarded with the PCCP Student Prize.

Submit your lastest research to PCCP today!

FreeRadical prize

James Ge being presented with the PCCP Student Poster Prize by Professor Scott Kable.

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Themed issue: Weak Hydrogen Bonds – Strong Effects?

PCCP is delighted to present its current issue as a themed issue on Weak Hydrogen Bonds – Strong Effects?, Guest Edited by Wouter Herrebout (University of Antwerp) and Martin Suhm (University of Göttingen).

The cover image of this issue features the work of Dr Kisiel and co-workers on structure and properties of the (HCl)2H2O cluster, observed using chirped-pulse Fourier transform microwave spectroscopy (DOI: 10.1039/C1CP20841A).

coverHighlights in the issue include these high-profile Perspective feature articles:

Weak H-bonds. Comparisons of CHO to NHO in proteins and PHN to direct PN interactions
Steve Scheiner
DOI: 10.1039/C1CP20427K

The CH/π hydrogen bond in chemistry. Conformation, supramolecules, optical resolution and interactions involving carbohydrates
Motohiro Nishio
DOI: 10.1039/C1CP20404A

“Union is strength”: how weak hydrogen bonds become stronger
Sonia Melandri
DOI: 10.1039/C1CP20824A

Browse this high-profile themed issue today!

Call for papers: hydrogen bonding in electronically excited states

To complement this latest issue, PCCP is planning a themed issue in early 2012 which will focus on hydrogen bonding in electronically excited states.
Please submit your paper by 5 December 2011

Find out more about PCCP themed issues on our website.

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PCCP animated graphical abstract attracts attention!

The animated graphical abstract in a PCCP paper has attracted attention online this week and has been referenced in a Nature Chemistry editorial on the art of abstracts.

Read the PCCP article or view the ‘dynamic’ graphic below:

Stabilizing carbon-lithium stars
Nancy Perez-Peralta, Maryel Contreras, William Tiznado, John Stewart, Kelling J. Donald and Gabriel Merino
DOI: 10.1039/C1CP21061K

Stabilizing carbon-lithium stars

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Nanostructures in Ionic Liquids themed issue

PCCP is delighted to present issue 30 which contains a collection of papers on the theme of Nanostructures in Ionic Liquids, Guest Edited by Jairton Dupont (UFRGS, Brazil) and Rob Atkin (University of Newcastle, Australia).

The cover image of this issue features the work of Sheng Dai and colleagues on boron and nitrogen-rich carbons with tailorable surface properties (DOI: 10.1039/C1CP20631A).

coverHighlights in the issue include:

Perspective
Plasma electrochemistry in ionic liquids: an alternative route to generate nanoparticles
Oliver Höfft and Frank Endres
DOI: 10.1039/C1CP20501C

Ionic liquids as recycling solvents for the synthesis of magnetic nanoparticles
Flavia C. C. Oliveira, Fernando B. Effenberger, Marcelo H. Sousa, Renato F. Jardim, Pedro K. Kiyohara, Jairton Dupont, Joel C. Rubim and Liane M. Rossi
DOI: 10.1039/C1CP21518C

Growth of sputter-deposited gold nanoparticles in ionic liquids
Evert Vanecht, Koen Binnemans, Jin Won Seo, Linda Stappers and Jan Fransaer
DOI: 10.1039/C1CP20552H

Browse this high-profile themed issue today!

Upcoming RSC Conference in this area:

Ionic Liquids Conference: Faraday Discussion 154
22 – 24 August 2011
Belfast, UK
Last chance to register!

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Call for papers: Hydrogen Bonding in Electronically Excited States

PCCP themed issue: Hydrogen Bonding in Electronically Excited States
Guest Editors: Guang-Jiu Zhao and Ke-Li Han
(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, China)

PCCP is delighted to announce the high-profile themed issue ‘Hydrogen Bonding in Electronically Excited States’. It is our pleasure to invite you to submit to this themed issue.

The themed issue will be published in PCCP in 2012 and will be displayed at relevant international conferences in summer 2012 to maximise the visibility of the work published.

Deadline for Submissions: 05 December 2011

The hydrogen bonding has been recognized as one subject of contemporary research interests due to its prevalence and fundamental importance in various branches of science in the past century. To complement the recently published PCCP themed issue on ‘Weak Hydrogen Bonds – Strong Effects’, Guest Edited by Wouter Herrebout (University of Antwerp) and Martin Suhm (University of Göttingen, this themed issue will focus on hydrogen bonding in electronically excited states, which are play an increasingly important role in many photo-physical processes and photochemical reactions.

This themed intends to collect the state-of-the-art contributions from a large number of top scientists in the field throughout the world, including the themes;

  • excited-state hydrogen bonding structure and dynamics in gas phase and condensed phase
  • influences of excited-state hydrogen bonding on various important photo-physical processes and photochemical reactionsas
  • applications of excited-state hydrogen bonding in the vital fields such as fluorescent probes, light-driven molecular machines, optoelectronic functional materials and artificial photosynthesis.

Manuscripts can be submitted in any reasonable format using our online submissions service. Submissions should be high quality manuscripts of original, unpublished research. Please indicate upon submission that your manuscript is intended for this themed issue.

Submit to this themed issue

View the PCCP themed issue on ‘Weak Hydrogen Bonds – Strong Effects’

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Artificial photosynthesis conference – register before 5 August

Artificial Photosynthesis: Faraday Discussion 155
5 – 7 September 2011
Edinburgh, UK

Registration deadline – 05 August 2011

Last chance to register for this exciting conference !

Confirmed speakers

• Graham Fleming, University of California, Berkeley, USA
• Sir Richard Friend FRS, University of Cambridge, UK
• Michael Graetzel, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland
• Dirk Guldi, University of Erlangen , Germany
• Devens Gust, Arizona State University, USA
• Osamu Ishitani, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan
• Tom Mallouk, Pennsylvania State University, USA
• Stefan Matile, University of Geneva, Switzerland
• Garry Rumbles, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, USA
• Stenbjörn Styring, Uppsala University, Sweden
• Licheng Sun, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden

There is a growing conviction that the only real prospect for our long-term energy provision relies on the ability to collect and store sunlight in the form of chemical potential. The need for alternative fuels and reduction of excess carbon dioxide left over from our era of fossil fuel consumption, focuses the attention on the design of effective artificial photosynthetic systems. This is a growing global problem and it will soon become the dominant scientific issue.

Applying new knowledge to old problems: FD155 will focus on possible solutions to long-standing problems in the development of artificial synthesis. This topical and important area of science covers many disciplines. The combination of biology, chemistry, physics and theory makes for an exciting blend of discussion points.

Themes

• Electronic energy transfer
• Fuel production / carbon dioxide reduction
• Oxygen evolution
• Integrated photo-systems
• Electron transfer

FD155

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Jean-Pierre Schermann: a tribute

The PCCP Editorial team are very sad to learn that Jean-Pierre Schermann has recently passed away. We would like to take this opportunity to express our deepest sympathies to his family and friends.

Jean-Pierre Schermann was Emeritus Professor at the University of Paris 13 (Laboratoire de Physique des Lasers) and has made considerable impressive contributions to the scientific community in the field of spectroscopy and modeling of biomolecular structures.

Jean Pierre Schermann

Jean Pierre Schermann

We are certainly extremely grateful for his long-standing support of PCCP as an author, frequent referee and more recently as a Guest Editor of the PCCP themed issue series on biophysics and biophysical chemistry, including the very recent themed issue on nanobiology:

Editorial on nanobiology
Seong Keun Kim, Taekjip Ha and Jean-Pierre Schermann
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011, 13, 9916-9917
DOI: 10.1039/C1CP90058G

 Jean-Pierre’s recent themed issue:
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An NMR machine in a fume hood

Scientists in Germany have demonstrated a portable nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrometer that’s small enough to be placed in a fume cupboard to monitor the progress of a reaction in situ.

NMR spectrometers are used to determine compound structures. They are typically installed in dedicated laboratories because they are large and their superconducting electromagnets – which split the spin states to create energy gaps, the transition energy of which makes up the final spectrum – need cryogenic coolers, which restrict their mobility. This means that the technique can’t be used in situ, which would provide valuable insights into reactions.

Federico Casanova and coworkers at RWTH Aachen University have overcome this limitation by using a permanent magnet the size of a fist instead of an electromagnet. The cylindrical magnet consists of three rings, each made up of an array of eight samarium-cobalt magnets, separated by parallel gaps. Eight smaller rectangular magnets can be moved in or out of the gaps to ensure a consistent field. The magnet is connected to a portable NMR spectrometer, which is controlled by a laptop computer.

An NMR machine in a fume hood

The reaction mixture is circulated through the NMR and back to the reaction vessel using tubing and a peristaltic pump and NMR spectra are produced on a laptop computer

To demonstrate the device and its flexibility, the team used it to follow the hazardous trimerisation of toxic propionaldehyde using an indium trichloride catalyst. As the reaction proceeded, the mixture was circulated through the magnet and back to the reaction vessel using tubing and a peristaltic pump. The team monitored the reaction’s progress online by determining the concentrations of reactant and product from the NMR spectra. ‘The advantage here is that during the reaction, we are getting information online,’ says Casanova. ‘The problem with a traditional spectrometer is that there are long time delays between sampling and measurements, and during this time the sample is not under controlled conditions.’

‘Having a handy way to monitor a reaction – how far it’s gone, how fast it’s proceeding, whether it’s following the right pathway or going off to produce some side product that’s not wanted – rapidly and conveniently in situ in the right place in the process line is potentially very important,’ explains Tim Claridge, director of NMR spectroscopy for organic chemistry at the University of Oxford, UK.

However, both scientists agree that the technique could be improved and Casanova plans to develop better magnets to improve sensitivity and resolution.

Read more here.

Read the PCCP Communication:

High-resolution NMR spectroscopy under the fume hood
Simon K. Küster, Ernesto Danieli, Bernhard Blümich and Federico Casanova
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C1CP21180C

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PCCP themed issue: Fragment and Localized Orbital Methods in Electronic Structure Theory

PCCP themed issue:
Fragment and Localized Orbital Methods in Electronic Structure Theory
Guest Editors:
Gregory Beran (University of California at Riverside)
So Hirata (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)

PCCP is delighted to announce the high-profile themed issue ‘Fragment and Localized Orbital Methods in Electronic Structure Theory’. It is our pleasure to invite you to submit to this themed issue.

The themed issue will be published in PCCP in 2012 and will be displayed at relevant international conferences in summer 2012 to maximise the visibility of the work published.

Deadline for Submissions: 28 November 2011

With broad and increasing interest in condensed-phase chemistry and physics, the past few years have seen remarkable progress in the development and application of new, accurate electronic structure methods that are applicable to chemistry in solution, molecular crystals, and biological systems. These achievements stem from both the development of new approaches for handling the large length-scales inherent in such systems (e.g. divide-and-conquer schemes and local correlation methods) and on new physical insights and algorithms that reduce the steep computational cost of calculating the important physical interactions accurately (e.g. symmetry-adapted perturbation theory). The combination of these approaches is effecting a rapid scientific transformation in which accurate quantum chemistry predictions are becoming feasible for complex systems.

By gathering works from these different areas, this themed issue will serve as a focal point that will highlight the tremendous progress that has been made and will help foster new ideas for future advances. The issue plans to cover both the latest methodological advances in the area and state-of-the-art applications to molecular crystals, proteins, nanomaterials, molecular excited states in solutions, and much more.

Manuscripts can be submitted in any reasonable format using our online submissions service. Submissions should be high quality manuscripts of original, unpublished research. Please indicate upon submission that your manuscript is intended for this themed issue.

Submit to this themed issue

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