Archive for March, 2025

Welcoming Dr Ji-Guang Li as an Associate Editor

We are thrilled to welcome Dr. Ji-Guang Li, National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS), Japan, as a new Associate Editor working across Journal of Materials Chemistry C and Materials Advance!

 

 

Ji-Guang Li is currently a chief researcher at the National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS) in Japan. He received his Bachelor’s degree in 1992, Master’s degree in 1995 and Ph. D. in materials science in 1998, all from the Northeastern University in China. After conducting research as an STA Fellow at the then National Institute for Research in Inorganic Materials (NIRIM) in Japan during 1999-2001 and as a postdoctoral researcher at NIMS during 2001-2002, he was appointed as a staff scientist at NIMS in 2002. He was a visiting scholar at the Georgia Institute of Technology in USA during 2008-2009.

His research interest lies in the design, controlled fabrication and evaluation of optically functional inorganic materials, particularly luminescent materials and transparent ceramics, for potential application in various relevant fields.

 

With my enthusiasm and expertise and through team work, I hope to contribute to the quality and reputation of both the Journals” – Dr Ji-Guang Li.

 

We encourage you to submit your latest work on optically functional inorganic materials, luminescent materials or transparent ceramics to his editorial office for consideration.

Submit your article to Ji-Guang’s Journal of Materials Chemistry C Office today here

Submit your article to Ji-Guang’s Materials Advances Office today here

 

Below are Dr Li’s most recent Journal of Materials Chemistry C publications for you to read!

Broadband photoluminescence toward the NIR II region and stable green ceramic pigments based on a novel NaBaScSi2O7:xCr silicate phosphor

Xuejiao Wang, Sihan Yang, Feng Jiang, Jiantong Wang, Changshuai Gong and Ji-Guang Li

J. Mater. Chem. C, 2025, Advance Article

 

Fast and versatile electrodeposition of vertically aligned layered rare-earth hydroxide nanosheets for multicolour luminescence and oil/water separation

Xiaoli Wu, Yongping Guo, Ji-Guang Li and Yuanli Liu

Mater. Chem. C, 2024, 12, 3116-3123

 

Lattice-site engineering in ZnGa2O4:Cr3+ through Li+ doping for dynamic luminescence and advanced optical anti-counterfeiting

Junqing Xiahou, Qi Zhu, Lin Zhu, Sai Huang, Tao Zhang, Xudong Sun and Ji-Guang Li

Mater. Chem. C, 2022, 10, 7935-7948

 

 

Please join us in welcoming Dr Ji-Guang Li to the Journal of Materials Chemistry C and Materials Advances Editorial Boards.

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Exploring the progress in melanins

Read the new collection in Materials Advances

We are delighted to share with you our collection focusing on the progress in fundamental, functional material and health aspects of melanins and related materials!

Guest Edited by Pooi See Lee (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore), Bernard Mostert (Swansea University, UK), and Carlos F. O. Graeff (Universidade Estadual Paulista “Julio de Mesquita Filho”, Brazil)

A note from the Guest Editors:

“We extend our gratitude to our colleagues worldwide for their contributions to this versatile and eco-friendly class of materials and trust that you, the reader, will find this themed collection enjoyable and enlightening.”

 

A small selection of the papers are featured below (all free to read):

Enlisting electrochemistry to reveal melanin’s redox-related properties
Eunkyoung Kim, Zheng Wang, Jun Wei Phua, William E. Bentley, Ekaterina Dadachova, Alessandra Napolitano and Gregory F. Payne
A computational investigation of eumelanin–drug binding in aqueous solutions
Sepideh Soltani, Anupom Roy, Arto Urtti and Mikko Karttunen
Tuning melanin: theoretical analysis of functional group impact on electrochemical and optical properties
Florian Heppner, Noah Al-Shamery, Pooi See Lee and Thomas Bredow

 

We hope you enjoy reading the full themed collection here.

 

Did you know?

At Materials Advances, our themed collections are built by collaboration between our Guest Editors and expert Associate Editors. Our Guest Editors guide the scope and curate the contributions in our collections but all submissions are handled through peer review by our team of resident Associate Editors. This means that as an author you receive a consistent experience, and as a reader you can trust the quality of the science being presented.

If you have an idea for a topical collection in your research field, we’d love to hear from you! Get in touch here.

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Congratulations to the poster prize winners at SupraLife Third School

Journal of Materials Chemistry BMaterials AdvancesChemComm and Biomaterials Science were delighted to sponsor the recent SupraLife Third School held at the University of Aveiro, Portugal from 9 – 14 March 2025. We were pleased to award the three best poster prizes and hope you will join us in congratulating our winners!

1st place poster prize

Hugo Brummer

Hugo Brummer is a PhD student at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands, under the supervision of Prof. Marleen Kamperman. He obtained his BSc degree in Chemistry from Hanzehogeschool in Groningen in 2021, working on designing responsive Pickering emulsions using complex coacervate core micelles for his thesis. That same year, he participated in the NCCR undergraduate summer internship at the Adolphe Merkle Institute in Fribourg, Switzerland, working on the development of mechanopigments that combine structural color changes with a chemically responsive spiropyran-based crosslinking system for strain sensing. He then obtained his MSc degree in Chemistry from the University of Groningen in 2024, specializing in polymer and supramolecular chemistry. For his master’s thesis, he explored a completely different field, attempting to create a system of self-replicators capable of exhibiting Lamarckian evolution.
His current research focuses on bioinspired spider silk production using microfluidics. By mimicking the spiders’ ability to control the local environment inside its silk producing gland (i.e. pH, type and concentration of salt), he aims to develop a green processing approach to fiber production.

2nd place poster prize

Chloé Manseau

Chloé Manseau graduated from the Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Matériaux, d’Agroalimentaire et de Chimie de Bordeaux in 2023, specializing in Formulation and Polymer Sciences. She then continued my studies with a PhD in Polymer Sciences at LCPO (Laboratoire de Chimie des Polymères Organiques) under the supervision of Sébastien Lecommandoux. Her PhD project aims to design and develop self-propelled artificial cells for drug delivery based on the self-assembly of amphiphilic copolymers into vesicles, called polymersomes.

3rd place poster prize

Andreia Malafaia

Andreia holds a bachelor’s degree in Biochemistry (UA, 2021), where she built a strong foundation in laboratory techniques and focused her final project on epigenetic drug development for cancer therapy. Her passion for biomaterials and regenerative medicine led her to pursue a master’s in Molecular Biotechnology and Bioengineering (UA, 2023). During her dissertation at COMPASS RG (CICECO-UA), she developed photocrosslinkable inks with natural polymers, including human-derived proteins, for 3D printing applications. She later received a research grant within the H2020 InterLynk project, further advancing biomaterial-based inks for personalized therapies. Currently, she is a research fellow at COMPASS RG (CICECO-UA) and has been recently awarded a PhD studentship. Andreia has attended international conferences, published a review in Biomaterials Advances, and actively engages in scientific workshops. Her journey has reinforced her ambition to innovate in medical science, particularly in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine

 

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Open call for submissions: Emerging Inorganic Materials for Solar Harvesting

Submit your research until 31 July 2025

We are delighted to announce this open call for papers to contribute to a themed collection for Journal of Materials Chemistry A on Emerging Inorganic Materials for Solar Harvesting in collaboration with ICMAT 2025 Symposium O in Singapore and guest edited by Lydia Helena Wong (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore), Robert Hoye (University of Oxford, UK), Yun Jeong Hwang (Seoul National University, South Korea), Yanwei Lum (National University of Singapore, Singapore) and Frank Osterloh (University of California, Davis, USA).

Scope

In this special themed collection of Journal of Materials Chemistry A, in collaboration with ICMAT 2025 Symposium O in Singapore, we invite submissions of recent emerging inorganic materials for solar energy harvesting devices such as solar cells, solar assisted water splitting and electrochemical CO2 reduction. Examples include but are not limited to: metal oxides (BiVO4, Fe2O3, FeZrO2, CuBiO, ZnFe2O4, etc, and their derivatives), sulfides (Sb2S3, Sb2Se3, CuSbS, Se, etc and their derivatives), novel kesterite (CuZnSnS4 and its novel compounds), metal nitrides (ZnSnN2, metal oxynitrides (TiON, ZrON, TaON and their derivatives) and other novel materials.

  1. Synthesis, characterizations of emerging inorganic photoabsorbers, charge transporting layers, transparent conductors
  2. Theoretical prediction of novel inorganic materials for solar harvesting.
  3. Nanostructuring strategies for novel inorganic materials
  4. New device structures for photovoltaics, solar water splitting, photocatalysis, photoelectrochemistry, CO2 reduction and etc.
  5. Novel electrocatalyst design, synthesis, and characterization for solar water splitting, photocatalysis, CO2 reduction and etc.
  6. High throughput techniques, machine-learning assisted discovery of new materials and etc.
  7. Novel approaches for enhancing light absorption using inorganic materials such as up/down conversion, solar concentrator and etc.
  8. High efficiency solar cells, solar water splitting devices, and photocatalysts

Guest Editors

Lydia Helena Wong (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore)

Lydia Wong is a Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. Her research interest is in the structural and chemical modification of semiconductor materials for clean energy and electronic applications, particularly for conversion of solar energy to electricity and fuel. She has published more than 160 publications in international peer reviewed journals and cited more than 10,000 times. A Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry, she serves on editorial boards for leading journals in energy and materials chemistry, including Journal of Materials Chemistry A.

Robert Hoye (University of Oxford, UK)

Robert Hoye is an Associate Professor of Inorganic Chemistry at the University of Oxford. Prof. Hoye obtained his PhD from the University of Cambridge in 2014, followed by a postdoc at MIT (2015-2016), and two College research fellowships in Cambridge (2016 – 2020). In 2020, he moved to Imperial College London as a Lecturer, then Senior Lecturer (Aug. 2022 -). In Oct. 2022, he moved to Oxford as Associate Professor. Prof. Hoye’s group focuses on developing inorganic semiconductors for energy applications, particularly focussing on lead-free perovskite-inspired materials.

Yun Jeong Hwang (Seoul National University, South Korea)

Yun Jeong Hwang has been an Associate Professor in the Department of Chemistry, at Seoul National University since 2021. Her major research topics are electrochemical catalytic reactions for carbon/nitrogen/oxygen utilization such as CO2, H2O, N-containing small molecules, Lithium mediated nitrogen reduction reaction, and biomass derivatives upgrading. It also covers in-situ/operando electrochemical Raman and IR analysis to understand the reaction pathways and the catalyst surface. She received a Bachelor’s degree and a Master’s degree from the Chemistry Department of Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST). She continued her graduate study at the University of California, Berkeley studying charge separation within semiconductor nanowire arrays for photoelectrochemical water splitting. She started her independent research career in the Clean Energy Research Center at the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) before she transferred to Seoul National University. She was one of the pioneer members who initiated the e-chemical (electrochemical CO2 conversion) project at KIST. She has served as an Associate Editor of the Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances, the Royal Society of Chemistry since 2019. She is a recipient of the 2020 Top 10 Technology Award in Climate Change Response by the Korean Government Ministerial Commendation and the 2020 Top 100 National R&D Award (Project Investigator Yun Jeong Hwang), by the Korean Government. She was selected as a Young Korean Academy of Science and Technology (Y-KAST) member in 2022 and Women Scientists at the Forefront of Energy Research by ACS Energy Letters in 2023.

Yanwei Lum (National University of Singapore, Singapore)

Yanwei Lum obtained his BEng degree in Materials Science and Engineering at Imperial College London in 2012. He then received his PhD degree in Materials Science and Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley in 2018 under Prof. Joel W. Ager III. This was followed by a PostDoctoral stint at the University of Toronto with Prof. Edward H. Sargent. He joined the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the National University of Singapore as an Assistant Professor in 2021. His research interests include electrocatalysis, CO2 conversion, electroorganic reactions and hydrogen storage. He has a H-index of 37 and his publications have been cited >9000 times. In his independent career, he has published in top international journals such as Nat. Chem., Nat. Commun., Sci. Adv. and J. Mater. Chem. A as the corresponding author.

Frank Osterloh (University of California, Davis, USA)

Frank Osterloh is a professor of Chemistry at the University of California at Davis, in the United States. His research interests are centered on the chemical and photophysical properties of inorganic materials and their use for solar energy conversion. This includes the development of photocatalysts for overall water splitting (artificial photosynthesis), inorganic photovoltaic cells, and the study of photochemical charge transfer reactions with surface photovoltage spectroscopy.

Submit to Journal of Materials Chemistry A

Please consider contributing to this open call for papers for our upcoming themed collection on Emerging Inorganic Materials for Solar Harvesting to be published in Journal of Materials Chemistry A.

Submissions to the journal should contain chemistry in a materials context and should fit within the scope of Journal of Materials Chemistry A. Please see the journal’s website for more information on the journal’s scope, standards, article types and author guidelines.

This call for papers is open for the following article types:

  • Communications
  • Full papers

Open for Submissions until 31 July 2025

If you would like to contribute to this themed collection, you can submit your article directly to the online submission service for Journal of Materials Chemistry A. Please mention that this submission is a contribution to the Emerging Inorganic Materials for Solar Harvesting collection in the “Themed issues” section of the submission form and add a “Note to the Editor” that this is from the Open Call. The Editorial Office reserves the right to check suitability of submissions in relation to the scope of both the journal and the collection, and inclusion of accepted articles in the final themed issue is not guaranteed.

Please also note that all submissions will be subject to initial assessment and rigorous peer review to meet the usual high standards of Journal of Materials Chemistry A.

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