Archive for the ‘Board News’ Category

Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances welcome Professor Dan Li to our Editorial Boards

Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances are delighted to welcome Professor Dan Li from Jinan University in China to the Editorial Boards as a new Associate Editor.

 

 

Dan Li is currently a Professor and the Dean of College of Chemistry and Materials Science, Jinan University, and the Director of Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Functional Supramolecular Coordination Materials and Applications. He received his BSc. from Sun Yat-Sen University in 1984 and then worked at Shantou University. He pursued his PhD at The University of Hong Kong with Professor Chi-Ming Che during 1988–1993. Then he returned to Shantou University and became Professor in 2001. He moved to Jinan University in Guangzhou in 2016.

His research interests focus on the design and fabrication of supramolecular coordination assemblies and their functions based on photoluminescence, porosity and chirality. He has co-authored more than 260 papers in peer-reviewed journals, including Nature, J. Am. Chem. Soc, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. and Chem. Sci. He was a recipient of the National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars of China in 2008, Fellow of The Royal Society of Chemistry (FRSC) in 2014, Ding Ying Science & Technology Award in 2019 and Guohua Outstanding Scholar of Jinan University in 2022.

 

Check out some of Dan Li’s publications in Royal Society of Chemistry journals:

Strong visible light-absorbing BODIPY-based Cu(i) cyclic trinuclear sensitizer for photocatalysis
Ri-Qin Xia, Ji Zheng, Rong-Jia Wei, Jiaxing He, Dong-Qin Ye, Ming-De Li, Guo-Hong Ning and Dan Li
Inorg. Chem. Front., 2022, Advance Article

Cr2O72− inside Zr/Hf-based metal–organic frameworks: highly sensitive and selective detection and crystallographic evidence 
Kun Wu, Ji Zheng, Yong-Liang Huang, Dong Luo, Yan Yan Li, Weigang Lu and Dan Li
J. Mater. Chem. C, 2020, 8, 16974-16983

Fine-tuning metal–organic framework performances by spatially-differentiated postsynthetic modification
Hai-Feng Zhang, Mian Li, Xue-Zhi Wang, Dong Luo, Yi-Fang Zhao, Xiao-Ping Zhou and Dan Li
J. Mater. Chem. A, 2018, 6, 4260-4265

 

Read our interview to find out more about Dan:

1. What attracted you to pursue a career in materials science and how did you get to where you are now?

Our society needs new materials. I have been studying Chemistry for many years. One of the most challenging tasks for Chemists is to create new molecules as candidates for materials application. I enjoy the discovery of new materials from understanding, designing and manipulating molecules. I am still somewhere in my career in materials science and I do not feel like I’ve “arrived”. Maybe the forever challenging is the forever driving force to where I get to now.

 

2. Why did you choose to specialize in your specific research field?

I began my research on the design and synthesis of photoluminescent metal complexes when I did my Ph. D. with Professor Chi-Ming Che at The University of Hong Kong, when Supramolecular Chemistry was growing tremendously. I was amazed by the beautiful infinite structures of aggregates of metal complexes and coordination polymers (CPs) or metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) which contain numerous types of chemical bonds and supramolecular interactions and possess diverse functions. As a synthetic chemist, I focus my research on the fabrication and preparation of new supramolecular coordination entities for developing new functional materials to solve energy and environmental related problems.

 

3. What excites you most about your area of research and what has been the most exciting moment of your career so far?

I am happy to see that the prominent growth of the research of MOF materials that has risen to the forefront of materials science, and a mass of researchers from different fields are involved to help drive the research forward. The most exciting moment of my career was when I receive my first paper published in Chem. Commun. when I was a PhD student.

 

4. What has been the most challenging moment of your career so far?

 The most difficult challenge was the lack of research facilities in my early career. I was lucky that I was supported by the President of Shantou University, when I worked there, to acquire an X-ray single crystal diffractometer.

 

 5. What is your favourite reaction or material, and why?

My favourite material is supramolecular coordination assemblies based on coinage-metal cyclic trinuclear units (CTUs). Each CTU is constructed by the coordination between linear two-coordinated metal ions and bridging pyrazolate ligands to form a near-planar nine-membered ring. Research of the CTU-based assemblies or cyclic trinuclear complexes (CTCs) has involved several fundamental areas, including noncovalent and metallophilic interaction, excimer/exciplex, acid−base chemistry, metalloaromaticity, supramolecular assemblies, and host/guest chemistry. These allow CTU-based assemblies to be embraced in structural complexity including supramolecular aggregates, coordination cages and coordination polymers/metal-organic frameworks, and functional diversity for a wide range of innovative potential applications that include chemical sensing, semiconducting, gas and liquid adsorption/separation, catalysis, full-colour display, solid-state lighting, and soft materials. My first publication in this field is the design and synthesis of a luminescent CTU-based MOF (Chem. Commun., 2006, 2845–2847). Based on our research in CTCs spanning near two decades, we recently published a perspective article in Chem. Commun. (2019, 7134–7146) and a review article in Chem. Rev. (2020, 9675−9742), providing a historic and comprehensive summary on CTCs from the perspectives of synthesis, structure, theoretical insight, and potential applications.

 

 6. Which of your JMC publications are you most proud of and why?

We discovered a dual-emitting Eu-MOF with 2,6-naphthalenedicarboxylic acid as ligand that exhibits a luminescence switching between red and blue triggered by pH over a short-range of 3 to 4. A single crystal to single-crystal (SC–SC) transformation process is involved with the displacement of the DMF coordinated by water molecules and the slight elongation of the Eu–O bond to the ligand, confirmed by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. With the specific pH-modulated luminescence switching property, the MOF could be used as an excellent sensor for the rapid detection of aspartic and glutamic acids amongst other amino acids. The work was published in JMCA (2019, 11127–11133).

 

7. Why do you feel that researchers should choose to publish their work in Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances?

Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances provide interdisciplinary platforms for researchers who work to design, create, and understand new forms of matter and their innovative applications. Both journals publish high quality and influential research in a very short publication period with average time to first decision of 29 days (for JMCA) and 22 days (for Materials Advances) respectively. Materials Advances is available to all through open access.

 

8. What attracted you to join the Editorial Boards of Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances?

I have published many papers in RSC journals since I was a PhD. student. I also reviewed a great number of manuscripts invited by the Editors of RSC journals. Working as an Associate Editor of both journals, I can interact with researchers in the materials science community more directly and frequently.

 

9. The JMC and Materials Advances teams are delighted to welcome you to the Editorial Board. What are you most looking forward to when acting as Associate Editor for the journals?

Thank you. I am delighted to join the Editorial Board and look forward to working together with others Board members and Editorial staff.

 

10. What is your biggest passion outside of science?

I like running. The passion of running not only is a consistent reward for health, but also creates a more fulfilling existence for my research.

 

11. What career would you have chosen if you had not taken this career path?

When I was a boy, I dreamed of being a soldier. In middle school, I had an obsession with Mathematics and liked to be a Mathematician. Finally, I changed my mind to choose Chemistry as my major in the University, maybe due to the highest score of Chemistry in all subjects of the University Entrance Exam. Honestly, I loved Chemistry also. I am fortunate that I made the change.

 

12. Why should young people study chemistry or related subjects?

Chemistry is a discipline to understand nature and to create new matter. It becomes increasingly essential to the development of innovative materials and cutting-edge technologies. Studying chemistry can open wide-ranging and stimulating career options to develop solutions to society challenges and explore a world of possibilities.

 

Submit your best work to Dan Li and our team of Associate Editors on Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances now! Check out our author guidelines for information on our article types or find out more about the advantages of publishing in a Royal Society of Chemistry journal.

Keep up to date with our latest articles, reviews, collections & more by following us on Twitter, Facebook or by signing up to our E-Alerts.

 

 

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Journal of Materials Chemistry C and Materials Advances welcome Professor Ana Flavia Nogueira and Professor Zhiguo Xia to our Editorial Boards

Professor Ana Flavia Nogueira, Associate Editor, University of Campinas, Brazil

 

Professor Ana Flavia Nogueira obtained her bachelor’s degree in Chemistry from the University of São Paulo (1996) and Master (1998) and PhD degrees in Chemistry from the University of Campinas (2001). She worked as a post-doctorate fellow at the Imperial College, UK, in 2001-2002 and as visiting researcher at Stanford University in 2017-2018. At the moment, she is Full Professor in the Chemistry Institute at UNICAMP and Director of the Center for Innovation on New Energies (CINE, www.cine.org.br). Professor Nogueira’s research focuses on the development of functional (nano)materials and their application in solar energy conversion. She has experience in the field of perovskite solar cells, perovskite quantum materials and dense energy carriers (generation of solar fuels through photoelectrocatalytic systems using water, CO2 and other low-added values substrates).

Read these publications by Professor Ana Flavia Nogueira in Royal Society of Chemistry journals:

Effect of the incorporation of poly(ethylene oxide) copolymer on the stability of perovskite solar cells

Jeann Carlos da Silva, Francineide Lopes de Araújo, Rodrigo Szostak, Paulo Ernesto Marchezi, Raphael Fernando Moral, Jilian Nei de Freitas and Ana Flávia Nogueira
J. Mater. Chem. C, 2020, 8, 9697-9706, DOI: 10.1039/D0TC02078H

Reduced graphene oxide in perovskite solar cells: the influence on film formation, photophysics, performance, and stability
Paulo Ernesto Marchezi, Francineide Lopes de Araújo, Rodrigo Szostack, José Carlos Germino, Eralci M. Therézio, Alexandre Marletta and Ana Flavia Nogueira
J. Mater. Chem. C, 2021, 9, 14648-14658, DOI: 10.1039/D1TC01360B

 

Professor Zhiguo Xia, Associate Editor, South China University of Technology, China

 

Professor Zhiguo Xia obtained his bachelor degree in 2002 and master degree in 2005 from Beijing Technology and Business University, and he received his PhD degree in chemistry from Tsinghua University in 2008. He worked at the China University of Geosciences, Beijing from 2008 to 2014 as an Assistant Professor and Associate Professor. He has been a full Professor at the University of Science and Technology Beijing since 2014. In 2018, he moved to South China University of Technology and worked as a full professor at The State Key Laboratory of Luminescent Materials and Devices. His research interest focuses on the structural design of inorganic luminescence materials including the rare earth phosphors and luminescent metal halides for emerging photonics applications, such as light-emitting diodes, scintillators and sensors.

Read these publications by Professor Zhiguo Xia in Royal Society of Chemistry journals:

Design optimization of CsPbBr3 nanocrystals into zeolite Beta composites as ultra-stable green emitters for backlight display applications
Bohan Li, Yuchi Zhang, Yan Xu and Zhiguo Xia
J. Mater. Chem. C, 2021, 9, 12118-12123, DOI: 10.1039/D1TC02757C

Recent progress of zero-dimensional luminescent metal halides
Mingze Li and Zhiguo Xia
Chem. Soc. Rev., 2021, 50, 2626-2662, DOI: 10.1039/D0CS00779J

We encourage you to submit your best work to Ana, Zhiguo and our team of Associate Editors now! Check out the Journal of Materials Chemistry C and Materials Advances author guidelines for more information on our article types.

Please join us in welcoming Professors Ana Flavia Nogueira and Zhiguo Xia to the Journal of Materials Chemistry C and Materials Advances Editorial Boards. 

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Editor’s Choice Collection: Perovskite-based solar cells

We are delighted to announce a new Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances Editor’s Choice Collection on perovskite-based solar cells from Prof. Zhiqun Lin.

Newly appointed Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances Advisory Board member Zhiqun Lin (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA), who has recently come to the end of his time as an Associate Editor, has gathered together the journals’ most outstanding recent papers in perovskite-based photovoltaics for this Editor’s Choice collection.

In order to highlight developments in perovskite-based solar cells, this online collection includes recent manuscripts from Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances on the topic.

Papers published in Materials Advances are gold open access and freely accessible. Those published in Journal of Materials Chemistry A are free to access until Friday 8 April 2022. You can read the full collection online here.

Congratulations to all authors featured and we hope you enjoy browsing this collection of articles selected by Zhiqun Lin. We are also pleased to highlight that Zhiqun Lin has recently been appointed to our sister journals, Nanoscale and Nanoscale Advances.

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Remembering Susan Odom, Materials Advances Advisory Board Member

Dr Susan Odom, member of the Materials Advances Advisory Board, has sadly passed away

It is with great sadness that we have learnt that Dr Susan Odom, University of Kentucky, has passed away suddenly at her home.

Susan Odom received her B.S. in Chemistry from the University of Kentucky in 2003, followed by her PhD from Georgia Tech in 2008, with a stint as a visiting graduate scholar at Oxford University.  After a 3 year post-doctorate position at the University of Illinois, Susan joined the faculty at her alma mater, the University of Kentucky in 2011, later becoming an Assistant Professor in 2017. In 2018, Susan was part of the University of Kentucky faculty group teaching at Jilin University in China.

During her time as faculty at Kentucky, Susan won the “Teacher who made a difference” award in 2012, 2013, 2016 and 2017.  More recently, last year, Susan was awarded the American Chemical Society Women in Chemistry Rising Star Award.  She was also committed to mentoring and supporting women in STEM fields, co-founding a group to encourage girls to pursue their academic goals, and serving on the Kentucky ACE Women’s Network.

Susan’s research focused on the design, synthesis, and characterization of conjugated organic materials for applications that access multiple states of oxidation.  She was particularly interested in structure/property relationships of redox-active molecules for energy storage applications, such as lithium-ion batteries and redox-flow batteries.  Susan’s group was also making strides in the development of materials for the positive and negative sides of flow cell batteries.

Susan published over three dozen articles on her research, and held five awarded patents and 11 patent applications.

Dr Odom will be missed by the Journal of Materials Chemistry family and the global materials community, but in particular by her friends, colleagues and students at the University of Kentucky.

Interim Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at UK, Christian Brady, has written a memorial for Susan

A message board has also been set up for people to share memories of Susan for the University of Kentucky and wider community

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Congratulations to our Highly Cited materials chemistry community!

We are delighted to have many world-leading materials science researchers in our community, helping to guide Journal of Materials Chemistry A-C as high impact journals publishing properties and synthesis of exciting new materials.

Many have been recognized in Clarivate Analytics’ recently published 2017 Highly Cited Researchers list!

Congratulations from the Journal of Materials Chemistry team to…

…Editorial Board members

  • Journal of Materials Chemistry A
  • Journal of Materials Chemistry B
    • Xiaogang Qu, Changchun Institute of Applied Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
  • Journal of Materials Chemistry C

…and Advisory Board members

  • Journal of Materials Chemistry A
    • Xinliang Feng, Dresden University of Technology, Germany
    • Jiaxing Huang, Northwestern University, USA
    • Linda Nazar, University of Waterloo, Canada
  • Journal of Materials Chemistry B
    • Chunhai Fan, Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
    • Luis Liz-Marzán, CIC biomaGUNE, Spain
  • Journal of Materials Chemistry C
    • Manish Chhowalla, Rutgers – The State University of New Jersey, USA
    • Mercouri Kanatzidis, Northwestern University, USA
    • Junji Kido, Yamagata University, Japan
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Martyn McLachlan: JMC C’s newest Associate Editor

Journal of Materials Chemistry C would like to give a warm welcome to our newest Associate Editor, Dr Martyn McLachlan, who joined us at the start of April. Dr McLachlan is a Reader (Associate Professor) and Director of Undergraduate Studies in the Department of Materials, Imperial College London. Previously he held a Royal Academy of Engineering/EPRSC Research Fellowship (2007-2012) at the same institute. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Glasgow in the Department of Chemistry. 

His research interests focus on the development of solution processed interlayer and electrode materials for photovoltaic and light emitting devices. Of particular interest to him are the correlation of processing-structure-performance relationships of solution processed organic, inorganic and hybrid devices and the characterisation of their surfaces and buried interfaces. His research is aimed at the integration of the materials and techniques developed into large volume manufacturing of plastic electronics. He has published more than 63 peer-reviewed articles and has been invited to give numerous lectures at international conferences.

Further information about Martyn McLachlan can be found on his webpage.

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Christopher Bettinger wins the 2016 Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship

We are delighted to announce that Professor Christopher Bettinger has been selected as the seventh winner of the Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship in recognition of the important contributions he has made to the materials chemistry field.

Professor Bettinger is aiming to present the lectureship at the 2017 Spring MRS in Phoenix Arizona, April 2017, during Symposium SM1 – Bioelectronics – Materials, Processes and Applications where he is both the meeting chair and an invited speaker.

Professor Bettinger received a S.B. in Chemical Engineering, a M.Eng. in Biomedical Engineering, and a Ph.D. in Materials Science and Engineering as a Charles Stark Draper Fellow, all from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  He completed his post-doctoral fellowship at Stanford University in the Department of Chemical Engineering as an NIH Ruth Kirschstein Fellow.

Christopher Bettinger is currently an Associate Professor at Carnegie Mellon University in the Departments of Materials Science and Engineering and Biomedical Engineering. He directs the laboratory for Biomaterials-based Microsystems and Electronics at CMU, which is broadly interested in the design of novel materials and interfaces that integrate medical devices with the human body.

Recent efforts focus on flexible electronics for neural interfaces edible electronics for ingestible diagnostics and therapeutics. Christopher is also the Co-Founder and CTO of Ancure, an early stage medical device company.


Christopher has also recently Guest Edited a joint themed issue between Journal of Materials Chemistry B and C on Organic Bioelectronics and contributed to the Journal of Materials Chemistry B 2016 Emerging Investigators themed issue.

In vitro electrochemical characterization of polydopamine melanin as a tissue stimulating electrode material
Ik Soo Kwon, Young Jo Kim, Luke Klosterman, Mats Forssell, Gary K. Fedder and Christopher J. Bettinger
J. Mater. Chem. B, 2016, 4, 3031-3036

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Li-Zhu Wu: JMC A’s newest Associate Editor

Journal of Materials Chemistry A would like to give a warm welcome to our newest Associate Editor, Li-Zhu Wu who joined us last month. Li-Zhu is currently based at the Technical Insitute of Physics and Chemistry in China. She received her Ph.D. from the Institute of Photographic Chemistry, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, under the supervision of Professor Chen-Ho Tung in 1995. From 1995−1998, she worked at the Institute of Photographic Chemistry as an associate professor. After a postdoctoral stay (1997−1998) at the University of Hong Kong working with Professor Chi-Ming Che, she returned to the Technical Institute of Physics and Chemistry, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, as a full professor.

Her research interests focus on photochemical conversion, including artificial photosynthesis, visible light catalysis for organic transformation, photoinduced electron transfer, energy transfer and chemical reactions in supramolecular systems. She has published more than 240 peer-reviewed articles, 2 books and 10 book chapters and holds 50 patents. She has been invited to give numerous lectures at international conferences, piquing interest worldwide.

Further information about Liz-Zhu can be found on her institution webpage.

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Welcoming new Journal of Materials Chemistry A Associate Editor Zhigang Shuai

We are pleased to introduce a new Associate Editor joining Journal of Materials Chemistry A, Professor Zhigang Shuai (Tsinghua University, China).

Journal of Materials Chemistry A Associate Editor Zhigang Shuai

Professor Zhigang Shuai received his Ph.D. from Fudan University in 1989 and is currently the Changjiang Scholar Chair Professor in the department of chemistry at Tsinghua University, China. Prior to this he worked as a postdoctoral and research associate in the University of Mons, Belgium, for 11 years before he became a Hundred-Talent research professor at the Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2002.

His research interests focus on the development of computational methodologies for modeling functional materials and he extended the density matrix renormalization group theory for the excited state structures, light-emitting property, and nonlinear optical responses for conjugated polymers. Zhigang has devised computational schemes for

the luminescence spectra and quantum efficiency, carrier mobility, thermoelectric conversion, and photovoltaic processes in organic/polymeric and layered nanomaterials and has published over 310 paper in peer-reviewed journals and supervised 18 PhD theses.

Zhigang was elected to the International Academy of Quantum Molecular Science, is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry, Foreign Member of the Academia Europaea and the Royal Academy of Sciences, Letters and Arts of Belgium and he serves as a member of the Executive Council of the Chinese Chemical Society. He was the recipient of the National Outstanding Young Investigator‘s Fund (2004), National Talent Program of the Ministry of Personnel (2006), the Chinese Chemical Society – AkzoNobel Chemical Sciences Award (2012), and the Special Allowance from the People’s Republic of China State Council (2013).

A selection of recent papers include:

Nuclear quantum tunnelling and carrier delocalization effects to bridge the gap between hopping and bandlike behaviors in organic semiconductors
Yuqian Jiang, Xinxin Zhong, Wen Shi, Qian Peng, Hua Geng, Yi Zhao and Zhigang Shuai
Nanoscale Horiz
., 2016, 1, 53-59

Thin film field-effect transistors of 2,6-diphenyl anthracene (DPA)
Jie Liu, Huanli Dong, Zongrui Wang, Deyang Ji, Changli Cheng, Hua Geng, Hantang Zhang, Yonggang Zhen, Lang Jiang, Hongbing Fu, Zhishan Bo, Wei Chen, Zhigang Shuai and Wenping Hu
Chem. Commun
., 2015, 51, 11777-11779

Enhancement of the p-channel performance of sulfur-bridged annulene through a donor–acceptor co-crystal approach
Jing Zhang, Guangyao Zhao, Yunke Qin, Jiahui Tan, Hua Geng, Wei Xu, Wenping Hu, Zhigang Shuai and Daoben Zhu
J. Mater. Chem. C
, 2014, 2, 8886-8891

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Congratulations Professor Lou

On behalf of the Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B & C Editorial Offices I would like to congratulate Dr David Lou, Nanyang Technological University, on his recent promotion to full professor, making him the youngest full professor at NTU Singapore.

Dr David Lou received his B.Eng (2002) and M.Eng. (2004) degrees from the National University of Singapore. He obtained his Ph.D. degree in chemical engineering from Cornell University in 2008. Right after graduation, he joined Nanyang Technological University (NTU) as an Assistant Professor, and he was promoted to Associate Professor in September 2013. He has published about 210 papers with a total citation of >21,000, and an H-index of 83. His main research interest is on designed synthesis of nanostructured materials for energy and environmental applications.

Dr Lou is currently an Associate Editor for Journal of Materials Chemistry A and last year co-Guest Edited a themed issue for Journal of Materials Chemistry A on flexible energy storage and conversion.

Congratulations Professor Lou on this highly impressive achievement!

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