Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances welcome Professor Lydia Helena Wong to our Editorial Boards

Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances are delighted to welcome Professor Lydia Helena Wong from Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore, to our Editorial Boards as a new Associate Editor.

Lydia Helena Wong is an Associate Professor at the School of Materials Science and Engineering (MSE), Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore. After obtaining her PhD from NTU, she worked as a Senior Engineer at Chartered Semiconductor and completed a short stint as post-doc at Stanford University.

 

Photo of Lydia Helena Wong

 

‘I look forward to working with the vibrant members of Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances editorial teams and receiving manuscripts in innovative materials chemistry approaches for efficient and sustainable clean energy generation.’

 

Lydia’s research interests include solution-based synthesis and characterizations of inorganic semiconductors and their applications in solar cells, solar water splitting and electrocatalytic fuel generation. She is particularly interested in novel strategies to enhance solar cell efficiency, printable solar harvesting devices, discovery of materials by high throughput methods and understanding of structure-property relationship of inorganic materials for energy applications.

She has published more than 150 publications in international peer reviewed journals, including several high efficiency emerging chalcogenide solar cells. Lydia currently serves on the Editorial Advisory Board of Solar RRL and is a recipient of the Nanyang Education Award (2013 and 2021), Honored Teacher of Koh Boon Hwee Award, and MSE Teacher of the Year award.

 

Check out some of Lydia’s recent publications in Royal Society of Chemistry journals:

Comprehensive physicochemical and photovoltaic analysis of different Zn substitutes (Mn, Mg, Fe, Ni, Co, Ba, Sr) in CZTS-inspired thin film solar cells
Stener Lie, Maxim Guc, Venkatesh Tunuguntla, Victor Izquierdo-Roca, Susanne Siebentritt and Lydia Helena Wong
J. Mater. Chem. A, 2022,10, 9137-9149 DOI: 10.1039/D2TA00225F

Highly efficient and thermally stable Sb2Se3 solar cells based on a hexagonal CdS buffer layer by environmentally friendly interface optimization
Huafei Guo, Xuguang Jia, Shreyash H. Hadke, Jiayi Zhang, Wei Wang, Changhao Ma, Jianhua Qiu, Ningyi Yuan, Lydia H. Wong and Jianning Ding
J. Mater. Chem. C, 2020,8, 17194-17201 DOI: 10.1039/D0TC04017G

Improving the interfacial properties of CZTS photocathodes by Ag substitution
Ying Fan Tay, Shreyash Sudhakar Hadke, Mengyuan Zhang, Nathan Lim, Sing Yang Chiamd and Lydia Helena Wong
J. Mater. Chem. A, 2020,8, 8862-8867 DOI: 10.1039/D0TA02042G

 

Join us in welcoming Lydia to our Editorial Boards!

 

Submit your best work to Lydia Helena Wong 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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Using Artificial Intelligence for New Material Discovery

An infographic highlighting how machine learning and ab-initio methods can be used to identify suitable materials

Complex amorphous oxides: property prediction from high throughput DFT and AI for new material search

Michiel J. van Setten, Hendrik F. W. Dekkers, Christopher Pashartis, Adrian Chasin, Attilio Belmonte, Romain Delhougne, Gouri S. Kar and Geoffrey Pourtois

Mater. Adv., 2022,3, 8413-8427 DOI: D2MA00759B

 

 

Meet the authors

 

 

Dr. Michiel J. van Setten got his PhD. in 2008 from the Radboud University Nijmegen after working metal hydrides for hydrogen storage. After a postdoc at the Kalsruhe Institute of Technology, working the development of hydrogen storage materials and electronic structure methods for molecules, and a postdoctoral stay at the Universite Catholique de Louvain, working on many-body perturbation theory, pseudo-potential development and materials informatics he presently works as a principal scientist at imec. Here he works on the use and development of materials informatics and the linking of ab initio methods to metrology for the semiconductor industry.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hendrik (Harold) F.W. Dekkers graduated in industrial engineering of applied physics in 1994. After working for the semiconductor equipment vendor ASM he joined the research group of silicon photovoltaic devices at imec in Leuven (Belgium) in 1999. In 2008 he received his Ph.D. at the Catholic University of Leuven (KUL) on the vacuum process techniques for silicon solar cell manufacturing. In 2007 he joined the Thin Films group of imec, being responsible for plasma-enhanced CVD processes in the front-end-of-line (FEOL) and the development of work-function metals. Currently he is involved in developing semiconducting oxides for several applications in nanotechnology.

 

 

 

 

 

Christopher Pashartis pursued his undergraduate degree in Mathematical Physics (co-op) at the University of Waterloo in Canada, finishing in 2015. After graduating, he began his interest in Density Functional Theory semiconductor research, pursuing a Masters of Applied Science at McMaster University, concluding in 2017. In 2018, he began his Doctor of Philosophy in Physics with Dr. Geoffrey Pourtois and Prof. Michel Houssa at KU Leuven and imec, Belgium, where he now resides a researcher. His areas of interest include mechanical and optical properties of materials, quantum physics, ab-initio computational techniques, machine learning, and software design.

 

 

 

 

Adrian Chasin is a Principal Member of Technical Staff (PMTS) and the R&D leader of the FEOL Reliability team at imec. He is involved in several logic/memory projects ranging from advanced devices architectures through new memory concepts to use of non-conventional semiconducting materials. He received the PhD in Electrical Engineering from the University of Leuven in 2014 under the supervision of Prof. Paul Heremans, when he developed devices based on new semiconducting oxides for display and flexible electronics targeting RF applications. After working at NXP on modelling/evaluation of CMOS technologies, he joined the imec reliability group in 2015 as a researcher. His main research interests are FEOL/MOL reliability in advanced CMOS technologies and thin-film devices for memory and BEOL applications. He authored and co-authored more than 150 publications.

 

 

 

 

Attilio Belmonte is a Principal Member of Technical Staff and R&D team leader of the Memory Device team at imec, Belgium. His activities are related to the design, electrical characterization, and physical understanding of various memory devices, namely resistive RAM and DRAM. He received his PhD in Physics from Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium, in 2015, with a dissertation on novel CBRAM devices, and he joined imec as a researcher in the same year. His current focus is on the device engineering of oxide-semiconductor TFTs for 3D-DRAM implementation. He has authored and co-authored more than 75 journal and conference publications.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Romain Delhougne received his material science MSc degree from the University of Strasbourg in 2001 and started his carrier as epitaxy research engineer at IMEC in 2001. He joined Philips Research Leuven (later NXP) in 2005, where he has been leading for 10 years the integration of PCRAM and GaN power devices. He joined back IMEC in 2015 as a 3D-NAND integration engineer, and took the Active Memory Program manager role from 2018 onwards.

 

 

 

 

 

Gouri Sankar Kar received a PhD degree in semiconductor device physics from the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, India in 2002. From 2002 to 2005, he was a visiting scientist at Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research, Stuttgart, Germany, where he worked with Nobel Laureate Prof. Klaus von Klitzing on quantum dot FET. In 2006, he joined Infineon/Qimonda in Dresden, Germany as lead integration engineer. There he worked on the vertical transistor for DRAM application. In 2009, he joined imec, Leuven, Belgium, where he is currently the senior program director. In this role, he defines the research strategy and vision for DRAM, MRAM, Emerging Memory, and Exploratory Logic (MX2, Spin logic, etc.) solutions that can be integrated into existing computing system architecture for better performance & lower-power computing.

 

 

 

 

Geoffrey Pourtois studied Chemistry (1997) and obtained a PhD in Chemistry (2002) at the university of Mons Hainaut, Belgium. In 2003, he joined imec in Belgium, where he has been working in the field of atomistic modeling, with a special attention for establishing relations between material, interface defects and electrical device performances. From 2003 to 2022, he has been building and heading the group of material simulation and physics in imec, where he has been focusing on the modeling, using atomistic simulations, of nanoelectronic related materials. His group is being involved in building fundamental insights into the relations between material, interface and device electrical performances for CMOS, memory, and exploratory devices concepts. During their exploration endeavour, his team studied complex material gate stacks involved in CMOS and memory applications and contributed to the identification and the study of new materials for interconnect, emerging and magnetic memories. He was nominated imec fellow in 2020 and (co-) authored ~ 340 oral and peer-reviewed publications.

 

An interview with the authors

What aspect of your work are you most excited about at the moment and what do you find most challenging about your research?

At imec, we work on the edge between academia and industry, in particular the semi-conductor industry. The state-of-the-art industry level equipment we have in our clean rooms mean we can do fundamental research that is at the same time directly relevant for a close to trillion-dollar industry. The semiconductor industry on its own lives on the crossroads between fundamental physics, etch chemistry, photo chemistry, computational solid-state physics, and electrical engineering, touching on many aspects of materials science. We work on many different topics in teams combining experts from all these fields. These many interactions and the fact that predictions we make based on the calculations, such as presented in our latest paper, are tested on the same process flows and machines that the big tech giants use to produce the chips that are present in all the devices around us, makes my work extremely exciting.

 

How do you feel about Materials Advances as a place to publish research on this topic?

I had a constructive and efficient interaction with the editors of Materials Advances in the process of publishing the paper. Also, topic wise I think the journal is fitting well, many of the recently appeared papers fit well to my general interest.

 

Can you share one piece of career-related advice or wisdom with other early career scientists?

If I look at the young researchers around me, I see they all struggle a bit with the dilemma between acting and rethinking. I mostly see this leading to overthinking. Young researchers should act. If you have a good idea, pursue it, and go into it head on. Don’t spend months or even years reconsidering and rechecking the literature. The older more experienced colleagues should be there to prevent you from reinventing the wheel. I have seen examples of both rethinking and acting fast, both in my own career and in those of people around me. Hardly ever did following an idea turn out a disaster. On the other hand, I have seen various examples of none pursued good ideas eventually being executed by other groups.

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Our Associate Editor Professor Kisuk Kang is in the Highly Cited Researcher list

We are delighted to announce that our Associate Editor for Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances, Professor Kisuk Kang, was included in the annual Highly Cited Researcher list recently released by Clarivate!

Professor Kang answered our questions and told us about his recent work and the challenges he faces in his field.

Please could you provide a short summary of your most recent work?

I have been working on the discovery of new electrode chemistry for lithium-ion batteries and elucidating the limitations of conventional electrodes by combined first-principles calculations and experiments. Recently, we discovered a new iron-based compound that exhibits unusually high specific capacity, which could be possible by cumulatively harnessing the capacity from both conversion and intercalation reactions. While employing these two reactions in a reversible way has been challenging, we succeeded it by exploiting a new amorphous framework.

What is the current biggest challenge you face in your field?

Breaking the energy density ceiling of current lithium-ion batteries is one of the most essential tasks for the wide employment of electric vehicles and large-scale energy storage. We are revisiting the current lithium-ion batteries with respect to the degradation mechanism or synthetic route in order to provide a breakthrough solution by employing new capabilities of characterizations such as in situ TEM and theoretical tools.

What does it mean to you to be a Highly Cited Researcher? Why is it important and what advice would you give to up-and-coming scientists hoping to increase their visibility?

As a scientist, the dissemination of new knowledge is important, and good science deserves better exposure. I am grateful for having been selected as a Highly Cited Researcher for the last five years. I will keep trying to address the current important challenges for batteries and, in the course of it, hope to share the new findings with colleagues in the field through publications.

 

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Congratulations to the poster prize winners at ICEL 2022

Journal of Materials Chemistry C and Materials Horizons were delighted to sponsor poster prizes at the 13th instalment of the International Conference of Electroluminescence and Optoelectronic Devices. In line with tradition, ICEL 2022 provided a platform for exchange with experts from all over the world who are involved in research, development, and manufacturing of emissive materials. Presentations spanned from materials and fundamental physics to their application in the latest devices and applications. Organic semiconductors, perovskites, quantum dots and hybrid materials were discussed.

We’d like to congratulate the winners of the JMC C and Materials Horizon poster prizes:

Our Gold Materials Horizons prize: Charlotte Riley

Our Silver Materials Horizons prize: Chang-Ki Moon, and John Marques dos Santos

Our Bronze Journal of Materials Chemistry C prize: Iakov Goldberg, Sonja Wieland, and Las van Turnhout

 

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Open call for papers: Themed collection on Nanozymes

Journal of Materials Chemistry B and companion journal Nanoscale are delighted to announce an open call for submissions to a themed collection on ‘Nanozymes’ to be published in Summer 2023.

 

Guest Edited by:

Professor Shaoqin Liu (Harbin Institute of Technology, China), Professor Vincent Rotello (University of Massachusetts, USA), Professor Asier Unciti-Broceta (University of Edinburgh, UK) and Professor Hui Wei (Nanjing University, China)

 

Deadline to submit: 1 May 2023

 

Nanozymes are nanomaterials with enzyme-like characteristics. They have been developed to address the limitations of natural enzymes and conventional artificial enzymes. Along with the significant advances in nanotechnology, biotechnology, catalysis science, and computational design, great progress has been achieved in the field of nanozymes since the discovery of peroxidase-like iron oxide nanozyme in 2007. Nanozymes have been explored for a variety of applications, ranging from biosensing and therapeutics to environmental protection and national security. To our knowledge, more than 400 laboratories from 35 countries are working on nanozymes. Notably, both the publications and citations on nanozymes have been growing rapidly, showing the enormous research interest from the field.

To further advance the field of nanozymes and highlight recent progress, we are delighted to invite you to contribute to this themed collection. We believe such a special collection will not only accelerate the development of the nanozyme field, but also attract more researchers to explore the hidden characteristics of nanomaterials for broad applications.

We welcome submissions from now until the deadline, 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 promoted in the second half of 2023 and beyond, ensuring maximum visibility of your article within the materials chemistry community.

Submissions to the collection should fit within the scope of Journal of Materials Chemistry B or Nanoscale. Please see the journal websites for more information about the scope, standards, article types and author guidelines. We would suggest that any manuscript focusing on the materials chemistry and bio-application of the nanozyme material would be better suited to Journal of Materials Chemistry B, whereas work more focused on the nanoscience, properties and insights of nanozymes with application in the biosciences, environmental sciences and beyond would be better suited to Nanoscale.

For this collection, we welcome full Papers and Communications. Review article submissions are by invite-only and as such we generally will not consider review proposals as a result of the open call.

All submissions will undergo a rigorous initial Editorial assessment as to suitability for the journal before potential peer review. Please note that peer review and acceptance of your submission will not be guaranteed.

We look forward to receiving your submissions and to featuring your latest nanozymes work in the collection.

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Congratulations to poster prize winners at the Materials Chemistry Poster Symposium 2022

Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B and C were delighted to sponsor a poster prize at the Materials Chemistry Poster Symposium 2022. As one of the RSC Materials Chemistry Communities flagship events, this poster symposium brings together outstanding PhD students and researchers at the start of their career in industry and provides a fantastic opportunity for them to showcase their research, and network with peers, leading academics, and industrial chemists.

 

We’d like to congratulate the winner of the JMCs poster prize, Chirag R. Ratwani!

Poster title: Surface modification of transitional metal dichalcogenides for intrinsically self-healing hydrogels

 

 

We’d also like to congratulation the Áine Coogan and Carolina Puligani, the winners of the other two poster prizes sponsored by the materials chemistry community.

 

(From left to right, Áine Coogan, Carolina Puligani, Chirag R. Ratwani)

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2022 Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship winner: Sahika Inal

We are delighted to announce that Professor Sahika Inal has been selected as the winner of the Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship 2022.

The Journal of Materials Chemistry annual lectureship, established in 2010, honours early-career scientists who have made a significant contribution to the field of materials chemistry. Congratulations to Sahika!

“I am delighted to have this prestigious recognition and committed to contributing further to the materials chemistry research and the community”

Sahika Inal is an Associate Professor of Bioengineering with co-affiliations in Electrical Engineering and Materials Science and Engineering programs at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST). She has a B.Sc. degree in Textile Engineering from Istanbul Technical University (Turkey), an M.Sc. in Polymer Science, and a Ph.D. in Experimental Physics, both from the University of Potsdam (Germany). She completed her postdoctoral training at the Center of Microelectronics of Provence of the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Mines de Saint-Étienne (France). Her expertise is in polymer science and bioelectronic devices, particularly in the photophysics of conjugated polymers, characterization of polymer films, and the design of biosensors and actuators. Since 2016, Inal lab at KAUST exploits the functionalities of organic electronic materials, investigates ionic/electronic charge transport, and designs electronic devices that record/stimulate biological signals. Sahika is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry and has received recognitions including ACS PMSE Young Investigator Award 2022, Beilby Medal and Prize 2022, 2023 WCC Rising Star (ACS), and has been shortlisted for the Nature Research Awards for Inspiring Women in Science in 2021. She is the author of 97+ publications, and her work has been cited more than 7900 times.

Twitter: @InalSahika

Group website: https://bioel.kaust.edu.sa/


Please join us in congratulating Sahika on receiving the award. To celebrate, we have put together a collection of her publications in Royal Society of Chemistry journals:

Read the collection

Our 2022 runners-up

Each year we have a large number of excellent researchers nominated for the lectureship award across Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B and C. To recognise the diversity of the three journals, overall community and candidates nominated each year, going forward we have decided to additionally recognise runners-up for the Journal of Materials Chemistry lectureship.

Professor Luisa Whittaker-Brooks

Luisa Whittaker-Brooks is an Associate Professor of Chemistry at the University of Utah. Her research centers on the design of well-defined hybrid materials with controlled morphology and interfaces that serve as conduits for deterministic and coherent energy and charge transfer for applications in energy conversion, storage, and electronics. Dr. Whittaker-Brooks received her B.S. degree in Analytical Chemistry from the University of Panama. Under a Fulbright Fellowship, she received her M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Materials Chemistry from the State University of New York at Buffalo. She was a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering at Princeton University. She is the recipient of the 2013 L’Oréal Fellowship for Women in Science Award and the 2015 Marion Milligan Mason Award for Women in the Chemical Sciences administered by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). She was named a Scialog and Cottrell Fellow by the Research Corporation for Science Advancement (RCSA), a Talented 12 by C&En news, and a GERA Ovshinsky Energy Fellow by the American Physical Society (APS).  She is also the recipient of a Department of Energy Early Career Award, a Sloan Fellowship in Chemistry, and the Camille Dreyfus Teacher Scholar Award.

Dr Jessica Wade

Dr Jess Wade is a physicist specializing in materials science, with a focus on new materials for next-generation technologies. Jess is interested in the use of molecular chirality to control the spin of photons and electrons, and the development of advanced characterisation techniques to investigate and optimise their functional properties. Chiral functional materials are promising candidates for more efficient displays, more sensitive photodetectors and room temperature, low-cost spintronics. She is currently a Research Fellow at Imperial College London. She is committed to improving diversity in science, both online and offline, and she has led and contributed to several initiatives to engage girls in physics, chemistry, and engineering. Since the start of 2018 Jess Wade has written the Wikipedia biographies of women and people of colour scientists every single day. She has also written a children’s book on materials and nanoscience called “Nano: The Spectacular Science of the Very (Very) Small”.

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Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances welcome Dr Subrata Kundu to our Editorial Boards

Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances are delighted to welcome Dr Subrata Kundu from the Central Electrochemical Research Institute (CECRI), India, to our Editorial Boards. Dr Kundu will be joining us as a new Associate Editor.

Dr Subrata Kundu is a Principal Scientist at the Central Electrochemical Research Institute (CECRI) in Karaikudi, India. He received his doctoral degree from the Indian Institute of Technology. He worked as a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Nebraska from 2005-2007, before moving to Texas A&M University from 2007-2010.

 

 

‘I will be ecstatic to receive top quality research papers and proud to contribute to developing the journal’s content, which addresses novel materials for energy and sustainability for the benefit of the scientific society.’

 

Dr Kundu has been the recipient of many prestigious awards, such as the Bhaskara Advanced Solar Energy (BASE) Fellowship in 2016, as well as many young scientist awards. He has been recognized as being in the top 2% of scientists worldwide for consecutive years (2020-2022) and was also highlighted as being in the top 5% of highly cited authors in the Royal Society of Chemistry’s journals in 2019. As well as this, Subrata was also listed in the top 3% of highly cited ACS authors in 2019 by the American Chemical Society.

Subrata and his group are well-known in the field of material chemistry, mainly focusing on energy, environment, and catalytic applications. He has published more than 250 research publications in peer reviewed journals, including Journal of the American Chemical Society, Energy & Environmental Science, Chemical Science, Journal of Materials Chemistry A, and Inorganic Chemistry. He is also well-known for his research on the synthesis of metal and inorganic nanomaterials for a wide range of applications, which include electrocatalysis for OER and HER, dye-sensitized solar cells, supercapacitors, and thermoelectric materials. His research also covers analytical and environmental applications and SERS studies.

 

Check out some of Subrata’s recent publications in Royal Society of Chemistry journals:

Boosting of overall water splitting activity by regulating the electron distribution over the active sites of Ce doped NiCo–LDH and atomic level understanding of the catalyst by DFT study

Hariharan N. Dhandapani, D. Mahendiran, Arun Karmakar, Pandiarajan Devi, Sreenivasan Nagappan, Ragunath Madhu, Krishnendu Bera, Palanichamy Murugan, B. Ramesh Babu, and Subrata Kundu

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2022, 10, 17488-17500 DOI: 10.1039/D2TA04647D

 

Stabilization of ruthenium nanoparticles over NiV-LDH surface for enhanced electrochemical water splitting: an oxygen vacancy approach

Arun Karmakar, Kannimuthu Karthick, Selvasundarasekar Sam Sankar, Sangeetha Kumaravel, Ragunath Madhu, Krishnendu Bera, Hariharan N. Dhandapani, Sreenivasan Nagappan, Palanichamy Murugan and Subrata Kundu

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2022,10, 3618-3632 DOI: 10.1039/d1ta09627c

 

Bimetallic tungstate nanoparticle-decorated-lignin electrodes for flexible supercapacitors

Swarn Jha, Siddhi Mehta, Eugene Chen, Selvasundarasekar Sam Sankar, Subrata Kundu and Hong Liang

Mater. Adv., 2020,1, 2124-2135 DOI: 10.1039/d0ma00494d

 

Join us in welcoming Subrata to our Editorial Boards!

 

Submit your best work to Subrata Kundu 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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Editor’s Choice Collection titled Beyond Li: Alternative battery chemistries, selected by Associate Editor Professor Magdalena Titirici

 

We are delighted to announce a new Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances and Editor’s Choice Collection titled Beyond Li: Alternative battery chemistries, selected by Associate Editor Professor Magdalena Titirici.

Read the Editor’s Choice Collection

Current Li ion batteries are relying on critical materials that have a high risk linked to their supply, while their demand is constantly rising. Moving towards a circular battery economy is one solution, but this alone will not be able to address the issue of critical materials. The other solution is developing alternative battery chemistries based on abundant materials to complement Li-ion batteries in the future and diversify the battery market to match requirements for different applications. This collection, selected by Associate Editor Professor Magdalena Titirici, Imperial College London, UK, highlights some progress made in this direction based on recent papers published in Materials Advances and Journal of Materials Chemistry A.

 

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 1 December 2022.
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Open call for papers: Themed collection on Microneedles

Journal of Materials Chemistry B is delighted to announce an open call for submissions to a cross-journal themed collection on ‘Microneedles’ with companion journal Biomaterials Science.

 

Guest edited by Dr Ester Caffarel-Salvador (Scientific Consultant, USA) Professor Ryan Donnelly (Queen’s University Belfast, UK)Professor Harvinder Gill (Texas Tech, USA) and Professor Hyungil Jung (Yonsei University, Korea).

 

Submissions open until 1 March 2023

 

Microneedles, since their inception as a unique transdermal drug and vaccine delivery system, have become a noteworthy system used in multiple routes, including gastrointestinal, oral (mouth cavity) and ocular, to name a few. The range of illnesses being targeted by microneedles has also increased significantly and includes infectious diseases, pain, diabetes, and allergies for example. Sensing is another upcoming application of microneedles. Innovation in microneedle fabrication continues to not only push the drug-carrying and delivering capacity of microneedles, but also making mass manufacturing feasible and economical. There is also increased activity in the commercial sector with different companies attempting to bring the first microneedle-based medical device to market.

This cross-journal themed collection on ‘Microneedles’ in Journal of Materials Chemistry B and Biomaterials Science aims to bring together recent advancements in the field of microneedles that readers will find informative and useful. The topics could include microneedle fabrication and development approaches, applications of microneedles that add a new dimension to existing core knowledge in the microneedles field, sensing applications and clinical studies that evaluate efficacy or other aspects of microneedle use in humans.

Submissions to the journal should fit within the scope of Journal of Materials Chemistry B or Biomaterials Science – Please see the journal website for more information on the journal’s scope, standards, article types and author guidelines. We encourage you to submit your work to the journal that you feel best reflects the scope of your work.

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

  • Communications
  • Full papers
  • Reviews
  • Perspectives

 

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

Please note that all submissions will be subject to initial assessment by the journal editors and as such we cannot guarantee peer review or final acceptance of your manuscript. If you have any questions about the collection, email us at materialsb-rsc@rsc.org.  We look forward to receiving and featuring your submissions in this exciting collection!

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