Welcome to the 10th Anniversary Issues!

The Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B and C 10th Anniversary issues are here!

We are pleased to present our special 10th Anniversary issues of Journal of Materials Chemistry A,B and C featuring some of the best work from members of the community who have supported the journals over the last 10 years. We would like to thank and celebrate our community for their ongoing support and for sharing their latest discoveries with us.

Journal of Materials Chemistry A anniversary issue

Journal of Materials Chemistry B anniversary issue

Journal of Materials Chemistry C anniversary issue

 

Past and present Editors-in-Chief, Deputy Editors-in-Chief and Editorial Board Chairs introduce the anniversary issue and reflect on the history of the journal and their experiences in this special Editorial: Introducing the tenth anniversary issues of Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B and C

 

Celebrating 10 years of Jornal of Materials Chemistry A, B and C. Read the 10th anniversary Editorial.

 

Read the Editorial

 

 

Ten years ago, when Journal of Materials Chemistry split into the three journals, Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B and C, the vision was to provide venues for highly topical research in a broad range of materials chemistry across three distinguished journal scopes. Since the first issues were published at the beginning of 2013, we have continued to host a diverse range of impactful research across the global materials chemistry community and covering the full breadth of our discipline.

Over the past decade, Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B and C owes their success to many dedicated authors, reviewers, editors, and readers. These special issues celebrate and thank those members of our community who have supported the journals over the last ten years, and we are honoured that these authors have shared their latest discoveries with us.

To ensure full access to our anniversary issues, all 3 will be free to read until 4th August 2023.

Keep an eye on the new additions to the collections over the anniversary year and don’t forget to check out the 10th Anniversary Statements included in the articles!

Discover more of our activities such as the Community Spotlight, the #MyFirstJMC Collections, the 10th Anniversary Cover Showcase or the Anniversary Survey Results, in our blogs linked below. 

 

Community Spotlight

We have published a series of blogs featuring interviews with various members of our communities who have supported the journals over recent years. Keep an eye out on our blogs platform and on our socials for our next Community Spotlight feature.

 

Promotional slide for the Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B and C 10th anniversary community spotlight featuring some outstanding reviewers. Image features photos of each of the reviewers, from left to right; Dr Ady Suwardi, Prof. Jiao Jiao Li, Dr Eva Hemmer, Prof Seung Uk Son, Prof Shinn-Jya Ding and Prof. Martin Bryce

 

Visit the Community Spotlight

 

 

#MyFirstJMC Collections

We have been showcasing authors who have published for the first time in Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B or C in 2023. Authors can opt-in to be included if it is their first-time publishing with the journal as a corresponding author. Check out the ongoing collections below to meet the next generation of our community and keep an eye on our socials for #MyFirstJMC promotion. We thank these authors for choosing to publish their work with us!

 

#MyFirstJMCA

#MyFirstJMCB

#MyFirstJMCC

 

 

10th Anniversary Covers

Since the start of 2023, we have encouraged authors to include a 10 in their cover designs to celebrate the 10th Anniversary of the journals. These covers have been promoted on Twitter using the hashtag #JMCs10Years.

 

 

Visit the Cover Showcase

 

 

The results are in – Journal of Materials Chemistry 10 Year Anniversary Survey

To celebrate 10 years of Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B and C we asked you to contribute your thoughts and perspectives about the development of materials chemistry and the future of the field!

 

Letters 'J' 'M' 'C' filled with materials chemistry related words in different colours.

 

Check out the results

 

 

Follow us on Twitter (@JMaterChem), WeChat and sign up to our mailings to keep up to date with our latest anniversary activities.

We sincerely hope you enjoy sharing in our celebration of ten excellent years of materials chemistry at the Royal Society of Chemistry.

 

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Open call for papers: Cross-Journal Themed Collection on Sustainable Composites

The Royal Society of Chemistry are delighted to announce our cross-journal themed collection on Sustainable Composites, guest edited by  Professor Ian Hamerton, (University of Bristol), Dr Lois Hobson (Centre for Process Innovation), Dr Jonathan Wagner (Loughborough University). Read more about our guest editors here.

The Royal Society of Chemistry is committed to championing new research and promoting skills and development in the composites sector. This cross-journal themed collection contributes to the action plan from the Sustainable Composite Materials report by the RSC. It aims to create opportunities for researchers to publish peer-reviewed studies on sustainable composites.

This cross-journal themed collection on Sustainable Composites will bring together articles* tackling the sustainability of the entire composite lifecycle, including new composite feedstocks, low-energy manufacturing, design for end-of-life, in-use benefits, extended composite lifetime and repair, material recovery and recycling. Contributions should clearly address the sustainability aspects associated with the chosen approach. The scope of this collection extends to the management, regulatory, policy, and economic aspects associated with improving composite sustainability.

Topics include:

  • Sustainable composite materials: These might include, but are not limited to bio-derived and low-carbon pathways to carbon fibre and composite resins (both drop-in and new resins); natural fibres (g., hemp, bamboo, and flax); new chemistries or new ways to existing chemistries; modelling for material prediction;
  • Low-energy manufacturing: Efficient manufacturing processes, covering both resource and energy efficiency, g., UV radiation, fast curing resins, additives for low temperature curing, additive manufacturing (3D printing composites);
  • Design for end of life: recyclable materials g., triggered degradation of thermosets, reversible adhesives, vitrimers; application of reactive modelling and machine learning.
  • Enhanced composite lifetime: Self-healing technologies for composite repair e.g., vitrimers; underpinning tools g., accelerated testing of polymers and composites, detecting material degradation e.g., microscopy, FTIR; secondary composite applications; repair strategies; and the potential for adoption of imbedded sensor technology.
  • Composite recovery and recycling: Strategies for the potential combination of chemical, biochemical and physical recycling technologies for key resin types to deliver both recycled input materials and structural building blocks as second-life materials , analytical techniques to identify composites from waste streams g., FTIR and laser induced breakdown spectroscopy, digital labels such as QR codes and RFID tags;
  • Composite additives: g., adhesives, conductors, core, curing agents (including hardeners and catalysts), sizing, toughening agents, flame retardants and UV stabilisers; nanocomposites as an additive in FRP providing thermal, electrical and/or mechanical properties; additives for enhancing performance e.g., toughening agents, UV absorbers/stabilisers, sizing (coating applied to surface of fibres);
  • Sustainable composite applications: These might include, but are not limited to g., wind turbine blades, ship hulls, hydrogen storage tanks, airplanes, and automotive parts;
  • Whole system evaluation: LCA, LCE, TEA, social-economic analysis across whole composite cycle; opportunities to explore concept of ‘sustainability in use’
  • Regulatory and Policy: REACH, material passporting, approval for new materials, verification, testing, adoption of standards to cover use of second-life materials

*This collection welcomes research articles, communications, and review articles. Opinion articles and perspectives will be included at the discretion of the Guest Editors and Editorial Office.

Open for submissions until 29 September 2023

20 RSC Journals** are welcoming articles for this collection, please find the list of participating journals below. Submissions should fit within the scope of each Royal Society of Chemistry journal. For more information about the scope, standards, article types and author guidelines of each journal, please click on the journal links below.

We welcome submissions from now until the 29th of September, with articles being published in the next available issue on acceptance and collated into an online collection. This allows greater flexibility for you to publish your research when it is ready, while ensuring your article is published quickly. The collection will be introduced with an Editorial and promoted towards the end of 2023 and beyond, ensuring maximum visibility of your article.

All submissions will be subject to rigorous initial Editorial assessment against the journal’s regular acceptance criteria. Peer review and acceptance in the journals are not guaranteed.

How to Submit:

If you would like to contribute to this collection, email materials-rsc@rsc.org, or submit to one of the chosen journals via the online submission service. Authors will be asked if they are submitting for a themed collection and should include the name of the themed collection: Sustainable Composites. Please also note the themed collection in your cover letter.

**Royal Society of Chemistry journals included in the collection. Please click on the links for further details.

Catalysis Science & Technology

ChemComm

Chem Soc Rev

Green Chemistry

Industrial Chemistry & Materials

Journal of Materials Chemistry A

Journal of Materials Chemistry C

Materials Advances

Materials Chemistry Frontiers

Materials Horizons

Nanoscale

Nanoscale Advances

Nanoscale Horizons

New Journal of Chemistry

Polymer Chemistry

RSC Advances

RSC Applied Interfaces

RSC Applied Polymers

RSC Sustainability

Reaction Chemistry & Engineering

If you have any queries, please contact materials-rsc@rsc.org. 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.

The Royal Society of Chemistry

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Open call for a themed collection on Sustainable Composites: Meet the Guest Editors

This cross-journal themed collection on Sustainable Composites will bring together articles tackling the sustainability of the entire composite lifecycle, including new composite feedstocks, low-energy manufacturing, design for end-of-life, in-use benefits, extended composite lifetime and repair, material recovery and recycling. Contributions should clearly address the sustainability aspects associated with the chosen approach.

The Guest Editors for this themed collection, Professor Ian Hamerton (University of Bristol), Dr Lois Hobson (Centre for Process Innovation) and Dr Jonathan Wagner (Loughborough University)

Find out more about our Guest Editors below:

Professor Ian Hamerton

University of Bristol

Ian Hamerton is currently a Professor of Polymers and Composite Materials with the Department of Aerospace Engineering, Bristol Composites Institute, University of Bristol, Bristol, U.K., with over 30 years of research experience in the development of materials for advanced composites and nanocomposites. He is recognized internationally for work on high-performance polymers. He is the Deputy Director/Research Coordinator of the ACCIS and CoSEM Centres for doctoral training.

Ian’s research is concerned with developing polymeric materials with improved performance suitable for use in demanding environments and technologically relevant applications (e.g. satellites, military and civil aerospace, high performance automotive applications, micro-/opto-electrionics and polymer filters).

 

Dr Lois Hobson

Centre for Process Innovation

Lois Hobson is a Senior Manager at the Centre for Process Innovation (CPI), a Research Technology Organisation and part of the UK High Value Manufacturing Catapult.

Lois completed her PhD in organometallic (University of Wales, 1991-94) before undertaking postdoctoral positions with Professor Jim Feast (IRC in Polymer Science and Technology, Durham University, ROPA 1995-98) and Professor Shiro Kobayashi (JSPS Fellowship, Kyoto University, Japan, 1998-99) focussing the synthesis and characterisation of hyperbranched polymer systems and artificial cellulosic structures respectively.  Continuing her interests in structure-property-performance relationships, she was the first female to hold the Toshiba Fellowship, joining Toshiba Japan’s fuel cell research group (Kawasaki, Japan) in 1999 and establishing patented technology for direct methanol systems.

Joining ICI Group in 2001, Lois worked with National Starch & Chemical Company (Vinamul Polymers BV, 2001) and ICI Group companies (Ablestik Laboratories, Emerson & Cumming, ICI Paints, Quest International) in the UK, Europe, Asia and North America, in research, product development, programme management and techno-commercial roles.  Latterly establishing large-scale, cross-business collaborative programmes to create underpinning patented research, technology translation and future product innovation.

In 2008, she moved to the UK public sector as Programme Manager for an £11M Local Enterprise Growth Initiative funded regeneration programme, before joining the Centre for Process Innovation (CPI) in 2009.  Over the past 14 years Lois has held various roles across the CPI business, focusing on enabling more effective translation of fundamental science and technology to market, including a 15month secondment to PPX Medical as their European Operations Manager.   She has established a portfolio of large collaborative programmes and supporting infrastructure on behalf of CPI, accessing regional, national, and European programmes to build its’ translational capabilities.  She currently holds the title of Senior Strategic Opportunities Manager and leads development of CPI’s new Sustainable Materials Strategy.

 

Dr Jonathan Wagner

Loughborough University

Jon Wagner joined Loughborough in 2018 and was promoted to Senior Lecturer in 2022. He is the Programme Director for the Undergraduate Chemical Engineering Programme and Co-Director for the Interdisciplinary Centre for Circular Chemical Economy (CircularChem).

He completed his PhD in 2016 on the hydrothermal liquefaction of microalgae under supervision of Profs. Valeska Ting and Chris Chuck within the Centre for Sustainable Chemical Technologies at University Bath. Until his appointment at Loughborough, he joined the Horizon 2020 Photofuel project as research associate at Imperial College London, focusing on algae system scale-up and system analysis. Before his PhD, he worked in industry, completing the BP upstream process engineering graduate scheme, with placements in Aberdeen (Schiehallion FPSO) and the CATS terminal in Teeside.

Since 2012, Jon Wagner has secured more than £6m in research funding as PI or Co-I from UKRI and Royal Society. He currently leads a £483k IDRIC-Wave 2 funded project on ‘Algae-based carbon capture and utilisation for UK cluster decarbonisation’ with collaborators at Heriot Watt and University of Manchester, following a successful £125k proof of concept study on algae-based biomethane fuel purification. He is co-founder of Loughborough’s Mini-CDT in low-dimensional catalysis.

 

Submit your work to the collection by 29 September 2023

 

For more information on the collection, participating journals and how to submit, see our open call blog post

If you have any queries, please contact materials-rsc@rsc.org. We look forward to receiving your submissions!

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Journal of Materials Chemistry 10th Anniversary Cover Showcase – June

This year, as you may know, Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B, and C are celebrating their 10th anniversary! To join in the celebrations, we’ve asked authors to find creative ways to add a ’10’ to the cover artwork and are excited to show you the results in our monthly cover showcase.

To join in the celebration, you can view the #JMCs10Years hashtag on Twitter and follow the posts for the year so far.

Here are this month’s covers:

 

Light-induced bi-directional switching of thermal conductivity in azobenzene-doped liquid crystal mesophases

 

Designed a hollow Ni2P/TiO2 S-scheme heterojunction for remarkably enhanced photoelectric effect for solar energy harvesting and conversion

Plasmonic random lasing and amplified spontaneous emission from donor–acceptor–donor dyes covered biocompatible silk fibroin film

 

MXene-decorated flexible Al2O3/TiO2 nanofibrous mats with self-adaptive stress dispersion towards multifunctional desalination

 

Membrane-disruptive homo-polymethacrylate with both hydrophobicity and pH-sensitive protonation for selective cancer therapy

 

Recent advances in catalyst design and activity enhancement induced by a magnetic field for electrocatalysis

 

Preparation of functionalized diene-elastomers upon top-down pyrolysis of their vulcanizates via dynamic covalent polymerization

 

A micro/nano-multiscale hierarchical structure strategy to fabricate highly conducting films for electromagnetic interference shielding and energy storage

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An Interview with our 2022 Lectureship Runner-up, Luisa Whittaker-Brooks

With the opening of the 2023 Lectureship nominations we would like to take the opportunity to celebrate our previous Winner and Runner-Ups from the 2022 Lectureship.

To do this, we asked them a few interview questions to gain some retrospective insight into their successes. We also hope that this could serve as advice and guidance to those who would be nominated for the 2023 Lectureship and beyond.

We have included Luisa’s responses below along with links to her past work for you to further explore.

 

Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship Runner-up Luisa Whittaker-Brooks, University of Utah, USA

 

Luisa Whittaker- Brooks, Journal of Materials Chemistry 2022 Lectureship Runner-Up

How did you feel when you were announced as a runner-up of the 2022 Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship? 

I was very excited when I received the email since I know this is a very competitive application. 

  

In your opinion, what would make for a strong candidate to be considered for the Lectureship? 

A strong candidate will be a scientist performing research at the forefront of the materials field. I believe it will also help if candidates publish their work in any of the Journals of Materials Chemistry and Materials Horizons, given that publishing their findings in these top-tier journals will make them gain visibility among potential selection committee members of the Lectureship award.  

  

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

I routinely published my best works in JMC and the one that I am most proud of is our paper entitled 
“Vertically oriented TiS2−x nanobelt arrays as binder- and carbon-free intercalation electrodes for Li- and Na-based energy storage devices (J. Mater. Chem. A, 2018,6, 21949-21960)”. It is very special because it was my first publication in JMC as an independent investigator. This paper was also part of the Emerging Investigator themed collection, and it was selected as a cover. 

 

Do you have any advice for Early-Career researchers who wish to be nominated for the Lectureship award? 

Start working on publishing your best work in JMC as soon as possible. This will help you gain visibility. Also, have someone nominate you for submitting a manuscript to the Emerging Investigator Themed Collection. 

 

At which upcoming conferences may our community meet you? 

My students and I typically attend the MRS, APS, ACS conferences.  

 

You can read a selection of Luisa’s work here:

 

Concepts and principles of self-n-doping in perylene diimide chromophores for applications in biochemistry, energy harvesting, energy storage, and catalysis’

Daniel Powell and Luisa Whittaker-Brooks.

Mater. Horiz., 2022,9, 2026-2052 DOI: 10.1039/D2MH00279E

https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2022/mh/d2mh00279e

 

‘Steric hindrance dependence on the spin and morphology properties of highly oriented self-doped organic small molecule thin films’

Daniel Powell, Eric V. Campbell, Laura Flannery, Jonathan Ogle, Sarah E. Soss and Luisa Whittaker-Brooks.

Mater. Adv., 2021,2, 356-365 DOI: 10.1039/D0MA00822B

https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2021/ma/d0ma00822b

 

‘Vertically oriented TiS2−x nanobelt arrays as binder- and carbon-free intercalation electrodes for Li- and Na-based energy storage devices’

Casey G. Hawkins and Luisa Whittaker-Brooks.
J. Mater. Chem. A
, 2018,6, 21949-21960 DOI: 10.1039/C8TA05645E

https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2018/ta/c8ta05645e

 

‘Bi2S3 nanowire networks as electron acceptor layers in solution-processed hybrid solar cells’

Luisa Whittaker-Brooks, Jia Gao, Anna K. Hailey, Conor R. Thomas, Nan Yao, and Yueh-Lin Loo.
J. Mater. Chem. C
, 2015,3, 2686-2692. DOI: 10.1039/C4TC02534B

https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2015/tc/c4tc02534b

 

Many congratulations again to Luisa, and don’t forget to take this opportunity to submit your own nomination for the 2023 Lectureship award. 

For more information and details on eligibility criteria and how to nominate a candidate, please visit the Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship webpage.

 

 The deadline for nominations is 25 June 2023

Nominate your candidate now!

 

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An Interview with our 2022 Lectureship Winner, Sahika Inal.

With the opening of the 2023 Lectureship nominations we would like to take the opportunity to celebrate our previous Winner and Runner-Ups from the 2022 Lectureship.

To do this, we asked them a few interview questions to gain some retrospective insight into their successes. We also hope that this could serve as advice and guidance to those who would be nominated for the 2023 Lectureship and beyond.

We have included  Sahika’s responses below along with links to her past work for you to further explore.

 

Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship Winner, Sahika Inal, KAUST, Saudi Arabia. "I am delighted to have this prestigious recognition and I am committed to contributing further to the materials chemistry research and the community"

 

Sahika Inal, Journal of Materials Chemistry 2022 Lectureship Winner

 

How did you feel when you were announced as the winner/runner-up of the 2022 Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship?

I was surprised, happy, grateful, and excited! A healthy balance of feelings which made me appreciate our community.

 

In your opinion, what would make for a strong candidate to be considered for the Lectureship?

I think service to the community is very important. We often think that academic excellence is the most important factor, but I feel that we are all doing significant scientific work, what probably makes a difference is how one contributes to the others.

 

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

I am proud of all my publications and work my group members have contributed. The publication, Savva et al JMC C, 2018 is however the one I will not forget about as it was the first paper that came out of my independent group.

 

Do you have any advice for Early-Career researchers who wish to be nominated for the Lectureship award?

I wish them best of luck and suggest them to publish their best work in RSC.

 

At which upcoming conferences or events may our community meet you?

I will be at FPI in Raleigh, SPIE in San Diego, MRS Fall in Boston

 

 

Discover some of Sahika’s work here:

 

‘Ionic-to-electronic coupling efficiency in PEDOT:PSS films operated in aqueous electrolytes’

Achilleas Savva, Shofarul Wustoni and Sahika Inal.

J. Mater. Chem. C, 2018,6, 12023-12030 DOI: 10.1039/C8TC02195C

https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2018/tc/c8tc02195c

 

‘The effect of the donor moiety of DPP based polymers on the performance of organic electrochemical transistors.’

Yazhou Wang, Amer Hamidi-Sakr, Jokubas Surgailis, Yecheng Zhou, Hailiang Liao, Junxin Chen, Genming Zhu, Zhengke Li, Sahika Inal and Wan Yue.

Mater. Chem. C, 2021,9, 13338-13346 DOI: 10.1039/D1TC02994K

https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2021/tc/d1tc02994k

 

‘Propylene and butylene glycol: new alternatives to ethylene glycol in conjugated polymers for bioelectronic applications’

Maximilian Moser, Yazhou Wang, Tania Cecilia Hidalgo, Hailiang Liao, Yaping Yu, Junxin Chen, Jiayao Duan, Floriana Moruzzi, Sophie Griggs, Adam Marks, Nicola Gasparini, Andrew Wadsworth, Sahika Inal, Iain McCulloch and Wan Yue.

Mater. Horiz., 2022,9, 973-980 DOI: 10.1039/D1MH01889B

https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2022/mh/d1mh01889b

 

‘A guide for the characterization of organic electrochemical transistors and channel materials.’

David Ohayon, Victor Druet and Sahika Inal.
Chem. Soc. Rev.
, 2023,52, 1001-1023. DOI: 10.1039/D2CS00920J

https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2023/cs/d2cs00920j

 

Many congratulations again to Sahika, and don’t forget to take this opportunity to submit your own nomination for the 2023 Lectureship award. 

For more information and details on eligibility criteria and how to nominate a candidate, please visit the Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship webpage.

 

 The deadline for nominations is 25 June 2023

Nominate your candidate now!

 

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Cross-journal themed collection in honour of Professor Thomas P. Russell

We are delighted to announce a new cross-journal themed collection in honour of Professor Thomas P. Russell.

This themed collection contains articles published in Journal of Materials Chemistry A, Nanoscale and Soft Matter and guest edited by Ilja Gunkel (Adolphe Merkle Institute, Switzerland), Xiaodan Gu (University of Southern Mississippi, USA), Jodie Lutkenhaus (Texas A&M University, USA), Du Yeol Ryu (Yonsei University, Korea), Jiun-Tai Chen (National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University, Taiwan) and Zhiqun Lin (National University of Singapore, Singapore).

During his long, extremely productive career, Professor Thomas P. Russell has made outstanding contributions to the field of polymer science and engineering, self-assembly, and solar energy conversion. His innovative research advances the fundamental understanding of the science and technology of block copolymers and organic solar cells. Moreover, he pioneered the utilities of small-angle scattering and reflectivity techniques to elucidate the phase separation of polymer blends and block copolymers as well as the morphology of interfaces.

On the occasion of Professor Russell’s 70th birthday, we have brought together Professor Russell’s former students, co-workers, and friends to join in celebrating his achievements and continued contributions to the field in this themed collection.

All of the articles in the collection are free to access until 1 July 2023. A selection of articles from the issue is provided below.

 Editorial

Introduction to the honorary themed collection for Thomas P. Russell

Ilja Gunkel, Xiaodan Gu, Jodie Lutkenhaus, Du Yeol Ryu, Jiun-Tai Chen and Zhiqun Lin

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2023, 11, 11028-11030 DOI: 10.1039/D3TA90077K

 

Journal of Materials Chemistry A

Recent development and emerging applications of robust biomimetic superhydrophobic wood
Xiaojun Li, Likun Gao, Min Wang, Dong Lv, Peiyao He, Yanjun Xie, Xianxu Zhan, Jian Lia and Zhiqun Lin
J. Mater. Chem. A, 2023, 11, 6772-6795 DOI: 10.1039/D2TA09828H

 

Water-coupled Monovalent and Divalent Ion Transport in Polyviologen Networks
Alexa Easley, Khirabdhi Mohanty and Jodie Lutkenhaus
J. Mater. Chem. A, 2023, Accepted Manuscript DOI: 10.1039/D3TA00289F

 

Asymmetric nonfullerene acceptors with isomeric trifluorobenzene-substitution for high-performance organic solar cells

Zhengkai Li, Zheng’ao Xu, Shanshan Chen, Jia Yao, Hongyuan Fu, Ming Zhang, Yang Bai, Haiqiao Wang, Zitong Liu and Zhi-Guo Zhang
J. Mater. Chem. A, 2023, 11, 4539-4546 DOI: 10.1039/D2TA09858J

 

Nanoscale

Assembly of polyelectrolyte star block copolymers at the oil–water interface
Jan-Michael Y. Carrillo, Zhan Chen, Uvinduni I. Premadasa, Christian Steinmetz, E. Bryan Coughlin, Benjamin Doughty, Thomas P. Russell and Bobby G. Sumpter
Nanoscale, 2023, 15, 1042-1052 DOI: 10.1039/D2NR05113C

 

Apex hydrogen bonds in dendron assemblies modulate close-packed mesocrystal structures

Taesuk Jun, Hyunjun Park, Seungbae Jeon, Hyungju Ahn, Woo-Dong Jang, Byeongdu Lee and Du Yeol Ryu
Nanoscale, 2022, 14, 16936-16943 DOI: 10.1039/D2NR05458B

 

The development of neutron reflectometry as a probe of the nanoscale structure of polymer thin film systems – founded on the pioneering work of Professor Thomas P. Russell
C. F. Majkrzak

Nanoscale, 2023, 15, 4725-4737 DOI: 10.1039/D2NR06756K

 

Soft Matter

Depletion attractions drive bacterial capture on both non-fouling and adhesive surfaces, enhancing cell orientation

Wuqi Amy Niu, Morgan N. Smith and Maria M. Santore

Soft Matter, 2022, 18, 9205-9215 DOI: 10.1039/D2SM01248K

 

Recent progress in emulsion gels: from fundamentals to applications

Chuchu Wan, Quanyong Cheng, Min Zeng and Caili Huang

Soft Matter, 2023, 19, 1282-1292 DOI: 10.1039/D2SM01481E

 

Structured liquids stabilized by polyethyleneimine surfactants

Mingwei Li, Shuyi Sun, Rongrong Qin, Meng Wang, Yongkang Wang, Yang Yang, Zhanpeng Wu and Shaowei Shi

Soft Matter, 2023, 19, 609-614 DOI: 10.1039/D3TC90009F

 

We hope you enjoy reading this cross-journal themed collection in honour of Professor Thomas P. Russell.

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Congratulations to our Journal of Materials Chemistry B and Materials Advances presentation prize winner at the 2023 Spring E-MRS Symposium J

The Spring E-MRS was held in Strasbourg from May 29 until June 3 2023. Journal of Materials Chemistry B and Materials Advances were delighted to sponsor an oral presentation prize for Symposium J: Design and scaling up of theranostic nanoplatforms for health: towards translational studies and we would like to congratulate Tina Škorjanc for being the recipient of this prize!

After graduating from the International Baccalaureate programme in her native Slovenia in 2011, Tina Škorjanc moved to the United Arab Emirates to study biochemistry at the newly established New York University Abu Dhabi. In 2015, she started a PhD program in chemistry at New York University in New York, but her research endeavours took her back to the Abu Dhabi campus. Her research focus was on the preparation of covalent organic polymers and frameworks for applications in water purification and drug delivery. Tina graduated with a PhD in 2020, and her thesis was awarded the Pregel Award for an Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation by the National Institute of Chemistry in Slovenia. In 2021, she was awarded a Marie Sklodowska-Curie Widening Fellowship to work on developing new sensor materials at the University of Nova Gorica, Slovenia. In 2022, she represented Slovenia at the 71st Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting in Lindau Germany. In the same year, she was also a finalist for the Prometheus of Science Award, a prize for science communication in Slovenia. Although she is a researcher and a chemist on paper, she is most passionate about travel.

Congratulations Tina!

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Open call for papers for Journal of Materials Chemistry A themed collection ‘Advancing materials through high-throughput experiments and computation’

Submit your work to this new themed collection, guest edited by Moran Balaish, Helge Soren Stein, Arghya Bhowmik and John Gregoire

Journal of Materials Chemistry A, published by the Royal Society of Chemistry, is pleased to announce an open call for papers for our up-and-coming themed collection on

Advancing energy-materials through high-throughput experiments and computation.

 

Banner with photos of Guest editors: Dr. Moran Balaish, Prof. Helge Sören Stein, Prof. Arghya Bhowmik, Prof. John Gregoire Background: Journal of Materials Chemistry A background image (Earth with 3D modelled molecules linking around the globe)

 

The unprecedented need for new and improved energy conversion and storage materials creates an historic imperative to accelerate the research process and proliferate new and improved materials (and interfaces) from guided and serendipitous discovery to commercial application by 5x – 20x. Integrating high-throughput automated ceramic synthesis, data management, data mining, autonomous materials characterization, and robust data analysis with guidance and uncertainty quantification from artificial intelligence (AI) and machine-learning (ML) can revolutionize how research is conducted. This accelerated way of orchestrating chemistry sparks new avenues in interdisciplinary research across chemistry, physics, material science, computer science, engineering and stimulates breakthroughs in energy materials.

Guest Edited by Dr. Moran Balaish (Technical University of Munich, Germany), Prof. Helge Sören Stein (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany), Prof. Arghya Bhowmik, and Prof. John Gregoire, this themed collection of Journal of Materials Chemistry A aims to provide a platform for recent developments in the emerging research area of material science and technology accelerated by artificial intelligence, autonomous, and automated methods for discovering, characterizing, understanding and upscaling energy materials and related applications. This themed collection will focus on the 4 major phases of inorganic material’s development cycle for energy materials relating broadly to the field of energy conversion and storage. We welcome contributions relating to orchestrating experiments, integrating simulations and experiment, uncertainty quantification in theory and experiment, going beyond facile property prediction, transfer learning, explainable machine learning models in chemistry, technical papers on new innovative methods for coating and synthesis, advanced automatic data analysis, and data management are welcome.

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

  • Communications
  • Full papers

Submission Deadline: 13th October 2023

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

If you would like to contribute to this themed collection, you can submit your article directly through the journal’s online submission service at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jmchema. Please add a “note to the editor” in the submission form when uploading your files to say that this is a contribution to the 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 have any questions about the collection, contact the Editorial Office at materialsa-rsc@rsc.org. We look forward to receiving your submissions and featuring your latest work in this exciting collection!

 

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Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B and C 10th Anniversary Community Spotlight: Outstanding Reviewers

This year we are pleased to celebrate 10 years since Journal of Materials Chemistry was split into three respective journals: Journal of Materials Chemistry AB and C, each focusing on a different aspect of materials chemistry. We are grateful to our fantastic community of authors, reviewers, Board members and readers and wanted to showcase just some of them in a series of ‘Community Spotlight’ blog articles.

Next in our ‘Community Spotlight’ series, we feature some of our outstanding peer reviewers who have gone above and beyond in supporting the quality, timely and rigorous peer review model for Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B or C over the years. Check out their interview responses below to find out why they like reviewing for the journals and to discover their top advice for first-time authors and reviewers.

 

Dr Ady Suwardi

Ady Suwardi received his PhD from University of Cambridge, UK, and B.Eng from Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore. He is currently a group leader in A*STAR and also an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the department of Materials Science and Engineering (MSE), National University of Singapore (NUS), Singapore. His main research area focuses on fundamental thermal and electronic properties of sustainable energy materials such as thermoelectrics, as well as their recycling, manufacturing, and device applications. He has a h-index of 27 and has published a total of >80 papers, with >30 corresponding/first authored papers in prestigious journals such as Nature Electronics, Advanced Materials, ACS Energy Letters, and Journal of Materials Chemistry A. He features in the Nanoscale and Journal of Materials Chemistry A Emerging Investigator series 2022. He currently serves in the early career editorial board in Materials Today Energy and youth editorial board in Soft Science. He has also served as a referee for more than 160 articles in 30 different peer-reviewed journals including prestigious journals such as Science, Angewandte Chemie, and Journal of Materials Chemistry A. He is also the recipient of an outstanding reviewer award from Journal of Materials Chemistry A in 2020. Beyond academics, he is a recipient of a Singapore National Award from the Prime Minister Office for his technical contributions during the COVID-19 crisis.

What encouraged you to become a reviewer for Journal of Materials Chemistry A?

When I first published in Journal of Materials Chemistry A back in 2020, I was very impressed by the rapid processing time and the quality of reviewers’ comments. Many people believe that quality takes a long time, but I have seen that in this journal, it is possible to have both quality and speed in the editorial and review process. Long story short, the smooth experience in publishing with the journal motivated me to sign up as the reviewer. My main motivation at the time was to give back to the energy community (especially in thermoelectrics and piezoelectrics) by helping to review some of the manuscripts. I am also heartened by the various gestures by the journal, such as sharing the final decision of the manuscript, as well as getting to see comments from other reviewers. This simple gesture has largely create the feeling of inclusivity for reviewer like myself. In addition to this, it is also a personal excitement for me to have the first-hand knowledge on the latest development within my research field. This has certainly helped me to better plan my own research and formulate the right scientific question.

What has been your biggest learning point from reviewing?

Having the opportunity to sit “on the other side” of the publishing process, I have had wonderful opportunities to see things from the eyes of reviewers. For instance, I have personally learnt to improve the quality of my own review by looking at the comments from other reviewers which was kindly shared by the journal. Importantly, looking at manuscript from reviewers’ perspective have also tremendously improved my own manuscript quality. When writing my own paper, I take conscious effort to think and see from the readers’ perspective. For example, innocuous habit like grouping all figures together at the end of the manuscript creates unnecessary trouble for some reviewers, having to scroll back and forth throughout the manuscript. On the other hands, I have personally learned some good habits in responding to reviewers’ comments from some of the manuscripts which I helped to review. For instance, by attaching the important changes in the manuscript directly in the response letter can greatly save the reviewer’s time and efforts to locate the specific changes made in response to a specific comment. Overall, as an early-career PI, I feel that I have gained more than what I give through my active involvement in peer review.

 

Prof. Jiao Jiao Li

Dr Jiao Jiao Li is a biomedical engineer and medical scientist. Her research in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine aims to develop new therapies for chronic diseases, particularly those affecting musculoskeletal tissues using a combination of approaches including stem cells, biomaterials, nanotechnology, and more. She is a Senior Lecturer and Research Group Leader at University of Technology Sydney (UTS). She was a recent National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Early Career Fellow, and Co-Deputy Director of the Australian Research Council (ARC) Training Centre for Innovative BioEngineering. She was selected by Science & Technology Australia as a 2021-22 Superstar of STEM – one of 60 Australian women to serve as national role models for the community. Jiao Jiao’s work has been recognised by >30 inter/national awards, including in 2022 the NSW Young Tall Poppy Scientist of the Year and Premier’s Prize for NSW Early Career Researcher of the Year (Physical Sciences) for her nationally significant contributions to research excellence and social impact, and being named as Australia’s Top 20 Under 40 Researchers. She was also the Australian winner of the international Falling Walls Lab competition in 2021. Jiao Jiao has a passion for disseminating science in the community, and for raising up the next generation of secondary and tertiary students for their future careers and leadership in STEM.

What encouraged you to become a reviewer for Journal of Materials Chemistry B?

Journal of Materials Chemistry B gets a lot of high quality submissions from the biomaterials field. As someone who was initially trained as a biomaterials scientist, I love seeing the latest cutting-edge work in the field. I have reviewed many papers for the journal in my interest area of tissue engineering, many of which were from groups conducting the most innovative work in this area, and have learnt a lot from these latest developments. I very much appreciate the journal’s efficient and transparent peer review process. By looking at my comments compared to those of other reviewers and the editor’s decision on manuscripts, I have learnt a lot about the peer review process and how to optimise the quality of my own manuscripts. Reviewing for the journal has also taught me to appreciate differing opinions, particularly when I was invited to provide an adjudicating review for manuscripts with conflicting reviewer reports. I am proud to say that reviewing for the journal has almost grown up together with my academic career, and that I have helped contribute to the growth of Journal of Materials Chemistry B as a major outlet for high quality papers in the biomaterials field.

Do you have any advice for first-time authors seeking publication in the journal?

I find that the best original research papers all share some common characteristics: 1) the work conducted was innovative or gave new insights into what was previously not known in the field, 2) the characterisations or analyses were directly relevant to proving a central point, and were performed with scientific rigour to good breadth and depth, and 3) the manuscript was written in a way that captures the latest advances relating to the subject matter, and clearly explains the significance of the work to a possibly generalist scientific audience. The editors of the journal always find reviewers who have specific expertise in the topic area of the manuscript, so the manuscript needs to well explain the specific novelty/significance of the study compared to the latest advances or what is already known/has been done. To some extent, the same applies for review papers as these also need to offer new insights or perspectives, or feature a unique collection of literature compared to existing reviews on the specific topic area.

 

Dr Eva Hemmer

Dr. Eva Hemmer is an Associate Professor of Materials Chemistry at the University of Ottawa. She received her PhD (2008) in materials science from Saarland University (Germany) under the mentorship of Prof. Sanjay Mathur. During her PhD she focused on the synthesis of lanthanide alkoxides and their decomposition to lanthanide-containing inorganic nanomaterials. This experience was further deepened during her postdoctoral studies when she worked on lanthanide-doped nanoparticles for near-infrared bioimaging with Prof. Kohei Soga (Tokyo University of Science, Japan, 2009-2012). In 2013 she was awarded a Feodor Lynen Research Postdoctoral Fellowship from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation to work in the groups of Profs. Fiorenzo Vetrone and Francois Légaré at INRS-EMT (Université du Québec, Canada, 2012-2015) to develop nanothermometers based on upconverting nanoparticles. In winter 2016 she came to Ottawa in order to design and study novel multifunctional lanthanide-based nanocarriers for biomedical and energy conversion applications at the Department of Chemistry and Biomolecular Sciences.

What encouraged you to become a reviewer for Journal of Materials Chemistry C?

I started reviewing for Journal of Materials Chemistry C when I was a postdoctoral fellow. One of my mentors, who was an editor, encouraged me to become a reviewer. I remember that I was quite nervous about it at the beginning. But I quickly started to enjoy reviewing as it is a great opportunity to get to see brand new research in materials chemistry that is also relevant to my own work on optical nanomaterials. The fact that JMCC shared the comments made by other reviewers as well as the final decision was very helpful and took away my initial uncertainty; it helped me to get better (I hope so 😊) in writing reviews and also to improve my own manuscript writing (I often ask myself what questions the reviewer might ask).

What would you recommend to new reviewers to ensure their report is helpful?

In my opinion, a helpful report provides constructive criticism. I have been lucky as an author to have received reviewer comments that helped to make the paper stronger. On the other hand, nothing is more frustrating than a one-liner rejection. My advice for new reviewers would be to accept review invitations for manuscripts about a topic that aligns very well with their own expertise, before getting into more complementary research fields.  Also, only accept an invitation if you have the time to carefully read the manuscript and to write a detailed report in time.

 

Prof. Seung Uk Son

Prof. Seung Uk Son is currently working for the Department of Chemistry in Sungkyunkwan University, South Korea. He majored in organometallics and received his Ph. D in 2001 from Seoul National University, South Korea. He collaborated with Prof. Young Keun Chung, Prof. Taeghwan Hyeon, and Prof. Dwight A. Sweigart on organometallics and nanomaterials. He joined Sungkyunkwan University in 2005. His present research focuses on morphology-engineered microporous organic polymers (ME-MOPs) for environment, energy, and bio-applications. He is serving as an Advisory Board member of Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances.

What do you like most about being a reviewer for Journal of Materials Chemistry A?

Compared with my reviewer experience for the journals of other publishers, the prompt efforts of the editorial office were the most impressive point for me. The fast decision including adjudicative cases and the handy communications from the editorial office have made my reviewing process comfortable. From the statement of authors, I could figure out easily the key intention of authors, which was another good point in the reviewing process of Journal of Materials Chemistry A.

Do you have any advice for first-time authors seeking publication in the journal?

I think that Journal of Materials Chemistry A is a representative materials chemistry journal of the Royal Society of Chemistry. The meaning of materials chemistry papers can be analysed from the aspects of synthesis or functional performance. If authors explain the meaning of works from these aspects (usually one of them), it will be very helpful for reviewers to figure out the meaning of works. In the case of synthesis, the novel synthetic point can be appealed, especially, compared with the previous work of authors or literature. For application performance, simple record competition without corresponding scientific logic and principles was not persuasive for me to understand the meaning of work. Thus, I think that the new principle is important rather than the technical record comparison. Moreover, without beating performance records, the trial and suggestion of new scientific principles can be sufficiently welcomed.

 

Prof. Shinn-Jyh Ding

 

Prof. Shinn-Jyh Ding is a faculty member at the Institute of Oral Science at Chung Shan Medical University, Taiwan. He received his Ph.D. in Materials Science from National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan (1999) on the topic of hydroxyapatite-based gradient composite coatings by plasma spraying and magnetron sputtering. Since 2015, he has been honored as a guest professor at University of Debrecen, Hungary. Research interests include surface modification of metallic implants, biomimetic bone cements, and biocomposites for load-bearing applications.

Do you have any advice for first-time authors seeking publication in Journal of Materials Chemistry B?

While the novelty and impact of a manuscript are the first things to be noted, the presentation of figures and tables is also extremely important to a good manuscript. In general, unclear Figure editing includes poor X- and Y-axes, symbols (or labels), and low image quality making the results difficult to read and understand. Furthermore, it is suggested that figures and tables can be embedded in the text, which leads to a clear presentation of the results. A commonly poor practice is to over-repeat the results without engaging in an in-depth discussion with previous studies.

What has been your biggest learning point from reviewing?

The biggest gain is to learn a state-of-the-art article from a researcher, which is related to my research interests. From that article, some insights and perspectives can be inspired in future work. Reviewing a well-organized article facilitates the manuscript writing of our research.

 

Prof. Martin Bryce

Martin Bryce graduated from Wolverhampton Polytechnic. He obtained a D.Phil. from York University in 1978 for work on synthetic methodology for sulfur and selenium heterocycles under the guidance of John Vernon and Peter Hanson. Following postdoctoral positions at the University of British Columbia,Vancouver (in Larry Weiler’s group) and the University of Bristol (in Roger Alder’s group) he joined Durham University. He was promoted to Professor of Chemistry at Durham in 1995. He is the recipient of a Ciba-Geigy Award for academic collaboration in Europe (1990), the Royal Society of Chemistry Bader Award (1992), the Royal Society of Chemistry Interdisciplinary Award (1992), the Nuffield Foundation Science Research Fellowship (1993), the University of Durham Sir Derman Christopherson Fellowship (1995) and the Royal Society of Chemistry Heterocyclic Chemistry Award (2002). Martin has held Visiting Scientist positions at the University of California at Santa Barbara, and the University of Copenhagen. He was a Troisième Cycle Lecturer in Switzerland in 2008 and a Tarrant Visiting Professor at the University of Florida, Gainesville in 2013. He was the co-director of the Durham University Centre for Molecular and Nanoscale Electronics (1990-2018). He was the Scientific Editor of the Journal of Materials Chemistry (1995-2000). Martin coordinated the EC FP7 Marie Curie ITNs “Fundamentals of Molecular Electronic Assemblies” (FUNMOLS) (2008-2012) and “Molecular-Scale Electronics” (MOLESCO) (2014-2017) comprising 10 European partner laboratories. 

What do you like most about being a reviewer for Journal of Materials Chemistry C?

The opportunity to help authors to improve their work by making constructive comments, and also to ensure that lower quality work is not accepted, by rejecting manuscripts that contain major errors, or are incomplete, or lack innovation

Do you have any advice for first-time authors seeking publication in the journal?

Pay as much attention to accuracy and detail in the Supporting Information as you do for the main manuscript. The rigour of the work (or lack of rigour) is often revealed by the content of the SI.

 

 

Thank you to all of our outstanding and dedicated reviewers for their support of the Journal of Materials Chemistry family of journals over the years.

We hope you enjoyed finding out more about some of our reviewers. Keep an eye out for our next ‘Community Spotlight’!

If you missed any of our previous ‘Community Spotlight’ blog posts, check them all out here.

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