Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Congratulations to our Journal of Materials Chemistry C poster prize winner at the Autumn meeting of the Brazilian Physical Society meeting 2023

Journal of Materials Chemistry C was happy to sponsor a poster prize, alongside PCCP, at the 2023 Autumn Meeting of the Brazilian Physical Society (EOSBF-2023)

We would like to congratulate the winners:

From the left to the right side: KENNEDY BATISTA GONÇALVES (JMCC winner), RODRIGO CAPAZ (SBF President), BASSEM YOUSSEF MAKHOUL JUNIOR (PCCP winner)

 

The Journal of Materials Chemistry C winner:

Poster Title: Portable Light Scattering Spectrometer: validation and application for a Label free optical sensing platform

Name: KENNEDY BATISTA GONÇALVES

 

The PCCP winner:

Poster Title: Simulating kinetic roughening in non-equilibrium growing interfaces using machine learning

Name: BASSEM YOUSSEF MAKHOUL JUNIOR

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Congratulations to our Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B and C poster prize winners at the MEDPore 2023

The MEDPore 2023 was held in Crete, Greece from May 17 until May 19 2023. From their website: The conference aims to bring together scientists involved in porous materials research ranging from metal-organic frameworks, covalent organic frameworks and zeolites to porous chalcogenides, carbons, polymers and organic molecules.

It is an excellent opportunity for scientists from all careers stages to keep-up with cutting-edge research in the field of porous materials and their applications, present and discusses their recent results, while engage with the international community.

Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B and B were delighted to sponsor a poster prize alongside Chemical Science, and Dalton Transactions.

Congratulations to the winner:

 

Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B and C

Winner: Ceballos Manuel

Title of Paper: Synthesis of core-shell Au@Zr-MOF nanocomposites: effect of noparticle shape in heating and photoluminescent properties
Authors: M. Ceballos, B. Pelaz, P. del Pino

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Call for Papers: Surface Engineering of Transition Metal Based 2D Layered Materials

Contribute to a new themed collection in Materials Advances

We are delighted to announce an open call for papers to our new themed collection focussing on transition metal based 2D layered materials!

 

 

 

We welcome contributions on transition metal based 2D materials in the form of research articles, communications, or reviews in the following categories:

  • Surface engineering techniques (novel strategical modifications) for transition metal based layered materials
  • Anti-corrosion applications by 2D materials including layer double hydroxides (LDHs)
  • Energy applications especially in supercapacitors, batteries, photo and electrochemical-water splitting.

 

Keywords: Surface engineering; 2D materials; Layered materials; Anti-corrosion; Energy

 

If you are interested in contributing to this collection, please get in touch with the Editorial Office at materialsadvances-rsc@rsc.org.

 

Submit your manuscript by 01 November 2023 at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/ma

 

Please note that article processing charges apply to all articles submitted to Materials Advances if, following peer-review, they are accepted for publication. Details of the APC and discounted rates can be found here.

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Call for Papers: Conducting Ceramic Membranes for Energy Conversion and Storage

Contribute to a new themed collection in Materials Advances

We are delighted to announce an open call for papers to our new themed collection focussing on conducting ceramic membranes for energy conversion and storage.

 

 

This themed collection will cover the research fields of:

  • Li based solid state batteries
  • Beyond Li conductors (Na, K)
  • Protonic Ceramic Reversible Fuel Cells: electrolyte and anode/cathode electrode design catalysts, cell component, cell design, reversible and dynamic operation, and testing
  • Oxygen-ion fuel cells and electrolysis cells, cell component, cell design, reversible and dynamic operation, and testing
  • Ceramic based oxygen and hydrogen separation membranes and membrane systems for natural gas processing
  • Computational materials science of ceramic ionic conductors

 

If you are interested in contributing to this collection, please get in touch with the Editorial Office at materialsadvances-rsc@rsc.org

 

Submit before 1st November 2023 here.

 

Please note that article processing charges apply to all articles submitted to Materials Advances if, following peer-review, they are accepted for publication. Details of the APC and discounted rates can be found here.

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Call for Papers: Biomaterials in Innate Immunity

Contribute to a new themed collection in Journal of Materials Chemistry B and Materials Advances

We are delighted to announce an open call for papers to our new themed collection focussing on biomaterials for innate immunity!

 

 

This themed collection will focus on the application of biomaterials engineered to study innate immune function or modulate phenotypes of immune cells in regeneration and disease. The collection will cover engineered biomaterials in cancer, regeneration/wound healing, auto-immunity/trained immunity, and vaccines targeting the innate immune system.

 

We are happy to consider both review articles and primary research work. If you are interested in contributing to this collection, please get in touch with the Editorial Office at materialsadvances-rsc@rsc.org

 

Submit your manuscript before 30 June 2023

 

Please note that article processing charges apply to all articles submitted to Materials Advances if, following peer-review, they are accepted for publication. Details of the APC and discounted rates can be found here.

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Journal of Materials Chemistry C and Materials Advances welcome Professor A. S. Achalkumar to our Editorial Boards

Journal of Materials Chemistry C and Materials Advances are delighted to welcome Professor A. S. Achalkumar from the Indian Institute of Technology (ITT) Guwahati, India, to our Editorial Boards as a new Associate Editor.

 

 

‘I am looking forward to working with Editorial Board members of Journal of Materials Chemistry C and Materials Advances and to give my best to enhance the reach and impact of these journals.’

 

Achalkumar Ammathnadu Sudhakar has worked as a full professor at the Department of Chemistry, IIT Guwahati since 2019, where he leads the Soft Matter Research Group. He is also associated with the Centre for Sustainable Polymers at IIT Guwahati. He received his PhD from the Centre for Nano and Soft Matter Sciences (CeNS) Bengaluru. He worked as a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Centre for Molecular Nano Sciences at the University of Leeds (2007 to 2009) and at RIKEN Advanced Science Institute, Wakoshi, Japan (2009 to 2011), before joining IIT Guwahati. He has been the recipient of the Indian Liquid Crystal Society Silver Medal 2019 for his research achievements.

His research interests fall in the broad area of liquid crystals, supramolecular chemistry, functional polymers, organogels and self-assembled organic semiconductors. He has published around 90 papers and 3 patents. He has several invited articles and hot articles to his credit. He is also serving as a Dean of Outreach Education Program at IIT Guwahati to popularise science and maths among school children. He is the life member of Indian Liquid Crystal Society, Chemical Research Society and Society for Polymer Science in India.

 

Check out some of Professor Achalkumar’s publications in Journal of Materials Chemistry C:

Highly stable deep red-to-NIR OLEDs with an external quantum efficiency of 4.9% from room temperature nanostructured columnar fluids based on hetero atom bay-annulated perylene bisimides

Paresh Kumar Behera, Mangey Ram Nagar, Ravindra Kumar Gupta, Sibasankar Pradhan, D. S. Shankar Rao, S. Krishna Prasad, Luke The, Abhijeet Choudhury, Jwo-Huei Jou and Ammathnadu Sudhakar Achalkumar

J. Mater. Chem. C, 2022,10, 18351-18365

 

Room temperature columnar liquid crystalline self-assembly of acidochromic, luminescent, star-shaped molecules with cyanovinylene chromophores

Ravindra Kumar Gupta, Suraj Kumar Pathak, Joydip De, Santanu Kumar Pal and Ammathnadu S. Achalkumar

J. Mater. Chem. C, 2018,6, 1844-1852

 

Tuning the self-assembly and photophysical properties of bi-1,3,4-thiadiazole derivatives through electron donor–acceptor interactions and their application in OLEDs

Abhay Kumar Yadav, Balaram Pradhan, Hidayath Ulla, Subrata Nath, Joydip De, Santanu Kumar Pal, M. N. Satyanarayanc and Ammathnadu S. Achalkumar

J. Mater. Chem. C, 2017,5, 9345-9358

 

Join us in welcoming Professor A. S. Achalkumar to our Editorial Boards!

 

Submit your best work to Professor A. S. Achalkumar and our team of Associate Editors on Journal of Materials Chemistry C 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 Mingzhu Li to our Editorial Boards

Journal of Materials Chemistry C and Materials Advances are delighted to welcome Professor Mingzhu Li from the Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China, to our Editorial Boards as a new Associate Editor.

 

 

Mingzhu Li received her PhD degree in Chemistry from Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences (ICCAS) in 2008. She joined the CAS Key Laboratory of Green Printing, ICCAS in 2008 and has been a full Professor since 2016.

Her research interests focus on self-assembly and functionalization of optical materials for photonics and optoelectrics, such as optical sensors, anti-counterfeiting, lasers, photodetectors and solar cells. She has received several awards including the National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars, the first prize of Beijing Science and Technology Award, and the outstanding member of the Youth Innovation Promotion Association of Chinese Academy of Sciences.

 

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

Nacre-inspired crystallization and elastic “brick-and-mortar” structure for a wearable perovskite solar module
Xiaotian Hu, Zengqi Huang, Fengyu Li, Meng Su, Zhandong Huang, Zhipeng Zhao, Zheren Cai, Xia Yang, Xiangchuan Meng, Pengwei Li, Yang Wang, Mingzhu Li, Yiwang Chen and Yanlin Song
Energy Environ. Sci., 2019,12, 979-987 DOI: 10.1039/C8EE01799A

A facile fabrication strategy for anisotropic photonic crystals using deformable spherical nanoparticles
Ke Wang, Chang Li, Zheng Li, Huizeng Li, An Li,a Kaixuan Li, Xintao Lai, Qing Liao, Fang Xie, Mingzhu Li and Yanlin Song
Nanoscale, 2019,11, 14147-14154 DOI: 10.1039/C9NR04735B

A green solvent for operating highly efficient low-power photon upconversion in air
Jinsuo Ma, Shuoran Chen, Changqing Ye, Mingzhu Li, Teng Liu, Xiaomei Wang and Yanlin Song
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2019,21, 14516-14520 DOI: 10.1039/C9CP01296F

 

Join us in welcoming Professor Mingzhu Li to our Editorial Boards!

 

Submit your best work to Professor Mingzhu Li and our team of Associate Editors on Journal of Materials Chemistry C 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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Special collection in memoriam of Prof. Susan Odom

This special collection across Materials Advances, Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Journal of Materials Chemistry C is in memoriam of Prof. Susan A. Odom, who sadly passed away on April 18, 2021.

 

Read the collection

 

Susan’s fundamental understanding of electro-chemical devices, coupled with her deep appreciation for materials chemistry, allowed her to push new boundaries. Amongst these were the development of new redox flow batteries, the design of lithium-ion batteries with redox active organic molecules, and the advancement of novel materials screening methods.

This special collection covers the topics that have been at the core of the scientific activity of Susan. As a chemist, she had a tremendous impact on the broad fields of organic electronics and electrochemical energy storage contributing research on the development of stable electro-active materials, the design of new electrodes and electrolytes for electro-chemical devices, the establishment of understanding of electron transfer reactions and, generally, the synthesis of new conjugated organic materials.

Guest edited by Veronica Augustyn, Kelsey B. Hatzell, Malika Jeffries-El, Jodie Lutkenhaus, and Natalie Stingelin.

 

All of the articles in the collection are free to access until 30th November, 2022. Articles in Materials Advances will always be free to access. A small selection of articles from the issue is provided below.

 

Introduction to the special collection in memoriam of Susan A. Odom (16 November 1980–18 April 2021)
Veronica Augustyn, Kelsey B. Hatzell, Malika Jeffries-EL, Jodie L. Lutkenhaus and Natalie Stingelin
Mater. Adv., 2022, Advance Article DOI: 10.1039/D2MA90085H

 

On the challenges of materials and electrochemical characterization of concentrated electrolytes for redox flow batteries
Alexis M. Fenton, Jr, Rahul Kant Jha, Bertrand J. Neyhouse, Aman Preet Kaur, Daniel A. Dailey, Susan A. Odom and Fikile R. Brushett
J. Mater. Chem. A, 2022, 10, 17988-17999 DOI: 10.1039/D2TA00690A

 

Functionalized anthrathienothiophenes: synthesis, properties, and integration into OFETs
Garrett Fregoso, Gehan S. Rupasinghe, Maryam Shahi, Karl Thorley, Sean Parkin, Alexandra F. Paterson and John Anthony
J. Mater. Chem. C, 2022, Advance Article DOI: 10.1039/D2TC02977D

 

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Congratulations to the winners of the Society for Biomaterials Postdoctoral Research Award

In April 2022, the Society for Biomaterials held their annual meeting in Baltimore, USA. Journal of Materials Chemistry B and Materials Advances sponsored this event along with companion journal Biomaterials Science.

We would like to congratulate the winners of the SFB Postdoctoral Research Award. Check out the award winners and learn about their research in our interview below.

 

Mykel Green: 1st Prize

The success of stem cell regenerative therapies has been crippled by low cell survival, poor retention in the target tissue, uncontrolled differentiation, and induction of host immune response. My work seeks to develop a PEG-based hydrogel carrier to address these concerns and improve engraftment efficiency by protecting the fragile blood-producing stem cells during direct delivery into the bone marrow and increasing cell retention through controlled cell release. Successful completion of this work and its subsequent studies will lead to an improved understanding of the pathophysiology of SCD and the development of my hydrogel system as a tool to target other bone marrow transplantation-reliant curative therapies.

1. What inspired you to go into your area of specific research?
While studying biology at Morehouse College, I fell in love with sickle cell disease. It’s a simple mutation, but the consequences are physiologically disastrous. Blood is nearly ubiquitous; therefore, all biomedical researchers can study it, but it is significantly under-resourced and under-studied relative to other conditions. I want to correct this injustice for patients with sickle cell and other health disparities.

2. What is one of the most rewarding things about your area of research?
I love creating polymers! Something about synthesis excites me, especially trying to develop a new protocol. It is akin to cooking from scratch; you always take great pride in the final product (except when results are unfavorable).

3. What are your next steps for your research/career?
In the immediate future, I hope to create a definitive body of research supporting my hydrogel carrier as a functional bone marrow transplantation modality in a non-diseased animal model. Eventually, I will begin testing in a sickle cell model and tailor the hydrogel to address its many challenges. I expect these studies to be a significant part of my early-stage investigator work, among many other related projects.

 

Teresa Rapp: 2nd Prize

Ruthenium Crosslinkers for Hydrogel Formation with Applications in Tissue Culture and Cell Delivery
My work focuses on the development of new molecular crosslinkers that respond to unique external stimuli, specifically light. This work discussed the synthesis and application of two new ruthenium-based hydrogel crosslinkers that can selectively respond to red (617 nm) and green (530 nm) light. Used in conjunction with an ortho-nitrobenzyl-based hydrogel crosslinker, I created a hydrogel system that softens in response to three unique, visible light inputs. I showed these hydrogels are cytocompatible, orthogonal, and can be used to study cellular fate in 3D.

1. What inspired you to go into your area of specific research?
A chemist by training, I was first inspired by the incredible potential to create new functional biomaterials by innovation in the chemistry space. This field has allowed me to pursue both my interest in basic science as I discover new molecules, and demonstrate their real world feasibility in a product that could transform the work of so many research groups across the world. I hope to continue to work at the forefront of biomaterial development throughout my academic career.

2. What is one of the most rewarding things about your area of research?
The depth of knowledge I get to pursue as I work in this area. I love my work in synthetic chemistry and materials development, and this area provides many opportunities for me to collaborate with bioengineers, biologists, clinicians, and many others; opportunities that allow me to learn about a vast range of natural sciences.

3. What are your next steps for your research/career?
I will be entering the tenure track faculty job market this year, looking to start my own research lab to explore the potential of these new photochemistries in the next generation of biomaterials.

 

Kimberly Nellenbach: 3rd Prize

I presented research focused on our lab’s novel hemostatic materials. We’ve developed Platelet-like Particles or PLPs that are capable of mimicking the ability of native platelets to form a platelet plug and stem bleeding during traumatic injury. My recent efforts have been focused on analyzing the in vivo safety and efficacy of these PLPs. In my research, it was determined that at an optimized dose, PLPs are able to significantly reduce blood loss across multiple models of traumatic injury without any deleterious off-target thrombotic effects.

1. What inspired you to go into your area of specific research?
Tissue engineering has been a long interest of mine because of family and friends who experienced tissue and organ damage due to injuries or chronic inflammatory illnesses.  I wanted to play an integral role in helping restore, maintain, or improve this damage.  I narrowed my focus of research on wound healing/hemostatic materials when I became part of the Advanced Wound Healing Lab at NCSU and wanted to contribute to moving this research forward.

2. What is one of the most rewarding things about your area of research?
One of the most rewarding aspects of developing hemostatic materials is that our lab is working towards filling a critical need, especially given the current nationwide blood shortage. 

3. What are your next steps for your research/career?
The next steps in my research career are to continue to explore ways to enhance wound healing and treat bleeding by investigating the efficacy of our lab’s platelet-like technology in different models of coagulopathies and impaired wound healing

 

We would also like to congratulate the following finalists for the SFB Postdoctoral Research Award:

Jason Guo

Ana Mora Boza

Jingjing Gao

 

Please join us in congratulating all the winners and the finalists of the SFB Postdoctoral Research Award 2022!

 

 

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Open call to submit your plastics research to these cross-journal themed collections on ‘Polymer Upcycling’ and ‘Plastic Conversion’

The Royal Society of Chemistry has announced an open call to submit your plastics research to our themed collections on ‘Polymer Upcycling’ and ‘Plastic Conversion’

The Royal Society of Chemistry is committed to sustainable plastics research and has published a policy statement regarding plastic waste. With increasing impact of plastic waste on the environment, it is necessary to research ways in which we can have a sustainable future for plastics.

Plastics research is interdisciplinary and involves a wide range of chemical scientists. As such, we invite you to contribute to our cross-journal themed collections by submitting your work to Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B, C, Polymer Chemistry or Catalysis Science & Technology.

 

Polymer Upcycling

Joint themed collection between Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B and C

 

 

In 2015 alone, the global waste generated by plastic packaging applications was 82.7 metric tons (Mt). Currently, waste management practices for the end-of-life plastics exploit landfilling, industrial energy recovery from municipal solid waste incineration, pyrolysis and recycling. Due to the ubiquity and necessity of plastics in our daily life, the elimination or reduction of plastics is not foreseeable in the near future and fundamentally new science is needed to describe and understand the polymers, interfaces, decomposition and upcycling of plastics. This Themed Collection aims to explore the latest developments in materials characterization, polymer design and synthesis, physical chemistry and molecular understanding of plastic decomposition and transformation that contribute to a broad knowledge base for upcycling waste plastics.

Submissions should fit within the scope of  Journal of Materials Chemistry A, Journal of Materials Chemistry B or Journal of Materials Chemistry C. We welcome high quality studies across all fields of materials chemistry in the form of full Papers, Communications and Review-type articles (Reviews, Highlights or Perspectives) and we invite authors to select the journal that best suits their submission.

 

For more information, visit our open calls page

 

Guest Edited by:

Blair Brettmann (Georgia Institute of Technology), Marco Fraga (Instituto Nacional De Technologia Brasil), Monika Gosecka (Polish Academy of Sciences) and Natalie Stingelin (Georgia Institute of Technology)

Submit your work to Journal of Materials Chemistry A, Journal of Materials Chemistry B or Journal of Materials Chemistry C now!

 

Plastic Conversion

Joint themed collection between Polymer Chemistry and Catalysis Science & Technology

 

 

 

 

Catalysts have been the main driver for the design of ever new polymers with highly diverse and specialized properties. In this themed issue, we aim to highlight research that makes use of catalysis to optimize the reverse. How can we get the most value out of plastic waste? In this quest, we especially welcome manuscripts that address the challenges unique to plastics. These include but are not limited to additive impurities; mixed polymer streams; how to contact the very viscous, high molecular weight polymer with the (micro-)porous catalyst or a cleavage agent and more broadly catalytic conversion of sustainable polymeric materials for a circular plastic economy. Unconventional approaches via photo-, electro- or mechano-catalytic approaches and combinations thereof are also very welcome. We highly encourage to place the work in the context of performance metrics of green chemistry.

Submissions should fit the scope of either Polymer Chemistry or Catalysis Science & Technology. We would suggest that articles focused on synthetic and polymer chemistry aspects would be best suited to Polymer Chemistry, whereas articles focused on catalytic and/or related methodological advances would be appropriate for Catalysis Science & Technology. The collaborative joint special issue recognizes that management of plastic wastes relies on research conducted at the intersection of polymer chemistry and catalysis. You may submit to whichever journal you feel is most relevant to your current research. Please note that your article may be offered a transfer to the alternate journal if deemed more appropriate by the handling editor.

 

For more information, visit our open calls page

 

Guest Edited by:

Professor Ina Vollmer (Utrecht University, Netherlands), Professor George Huber (University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA), Professor Haritz Sardon (POLYMAT, University of the Basque Country UPV/EHU, Spain) and Professor Zhibo Li (Qingdao University of Science and Technology, China)

Submit your work to Polymer Chemistry or Catalysis Science & Technology now!

 

If you would like to contribute to either of these themed collections, you can submit your article directly through the journal’s online submission service. Please add a “note to the editor” in the submission form when uploading your files to say that this is a contribution to the respective themed collection. The Editorial Office reserves the right to check suitability of submissions in relation to the scope of the collection, and inclusion of accepted articles in the final themed collection is not guaranteed.

If you would like more information about the ‘Polymer Upcycling’ themed collection, please email Materials-rsc@rsc.org. For more information about the ‘Plastic Conversion’ themed collection, please email Polymers-rsc@rsc.org.

We look forward to receiving your submissions and showcasing this important research in our collections.

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