Do you know someone who has made an exceptional contribution in the field of materials chemistry, helped to develop new materials with industry or pioneered new techniques for the benefit of materials research? The RSC Prizes and Awards recognise achievements by individuals, teams and organisations. There are over 60 Prizes and Awards available, covering all areas of the chemical sciences. Nomination is quick and easy using our online system and you can nominate yourself or a colleague. The closing date for nominations is 31 January 2011 so please don’t wait click on the link and find out more.
Top Ten most-read Journal of Materials Chemistry articles in November
DOI: 10.1039/C0JM02172E
DOI: 10.1039/C0JM01897J
DOI: 10.1039/C0JM02708A
DOI: 10.1039/B925751A
DOI: 10.1039/C0JM03253K
DOI: 10.1039/C0JM02126A
DOI: 10.1039/C0JM02494E
DOI: 10.1039/C0JM02271C
DOI: 10.1039/B913168J
DOI: 10.1039/B910898J
Hot Article: Effect of calcination on the structure and catalytic activities of titanium incorporated SBA-15
Materials made from Ti-incorporated into mesoporous silica have been synthesized using a one pot method by a team of scientists from Taiwan and Japan. The team studied that structure and properties of these materials as epoxidation catalysts. Fancy knowing more? Click on the link below to read the full article for free.
New Year, new faces
I would like to introduce myself as the new Editor of Journal of Materials Chemistry. In my previous role as Deputy Editor of this journal, I have had the opportunity to meet many researchers in the field and I look forward to meeting more of the community at various conferences this year. I am also the Editor of Soft Matter and Managing Editor of Polymer Chemistry.
Seth and I are both anticipating an exciting time ahead for Journal of Materials Chemistry. Seth says “I am delighted to be working more closely with the editorial team of Journal of Materials Chemistry in my capacity as Chairman of the Editorial Board. As Chairman of the Editorial Board, my goals are to continue to improve an already excellent journal by a variety of approaches including defining some very clear standards to streamline and standardize the review process and attempting to increase the number of Communications of particularly new and exciting work.”
I would like to say thank you to both of our predecessors, Dr Jamie Humphrey and Professor George Malliaras. Let me know if you have any queries or comments about Journal of Materials Chemistry – it would be great to hear from you!
Finally, I would like to wish you all a Happy New Year!
Sneak preview of the issue the celebrating 70th birthday of Professor Fred Wudl
Journal of Materials Chemistry is publishing a themed issue in celebration of the 70th birthday of Professor Fred Wudl later this year; however as there’s a symposium in honor of Fred Wudl’s 70th birthday starting on the 7th January I thought I’d give you a sneak preview of the articles.
- Fred Wudl. Discovering new science through making new molecules
- The thiophene/phenylene co-oligomers: exotic molecular semiconductors integrating high-performance electronic and optical functionalities
- Materials chemistry of fullerene C60 derivatives
- A review of powder modifications in conventional glass-ionomer dental cements
- Chalcogenoarene semiconductors: new ideas from old materials
- Alkoxy-substituted poly(arylene-ethynylene)-alt-poly(arylene-vinylene)s: synthesis, electroluminescence and photovoltaic applications
- Exotic materials for bio-organic electronics
- Unexpected and selective formation of an (e,e,e,e)-tetrakis-[60]fullerene derivative via electrolytic retro-cyclopropanation of a D2h-hexakis-[60]fullerene adduct
- Polymer bulk heterojunction solar cells: function and utility of inserting a hole transport and electron blocking layer into the device structure
- Tuning of electronic properties and rigidity in PEDOT analogs
- Carbon nanotubes from short hydrocarbon templates. Energy analysis of the Diels–Alder cycloaddition/rearomatization growth strategy
- Polymer solar cells based on diphenylmethanofullerenes with reduced sidechain length
- Efficient oxide phosphors for light upconversion; green emission from Yb3+ and Ho3+ co-doped Ln2BaZnO5 (Ln = Y, Gd)
- Charge and energy transfer processes in ruthenium(II) phthalocyanine based electron donor–acceptor materials—implications for solar cell performance
- Synthesis and properties of a triphenylene–butadiynylene macrocycle
- Probing magnetic interactions in columnar phases of a paramagnetic gold dithiolene complex
- Preparation, characterization, and photoswitching/light-emitting behaviors of coronene nanowires
- Varied nanostructures from a single multifunctional molecular material
- The return of photoelastic stress measurements: utilizing birefringence to monitor damage and repair in healable materials
- Diffusion of Al, O, Pt, Hf, and Y atoms on α-Al2O3(0001): implications for the role of alloying elements in thermal barrier coatings
- Glutathione S-transferase as a general and reversible tag for surface immobilization of proteins
- Electronic, redox and charge transport properties of an unusual hybrid structure: a bis(septithiophene) bridged by a fused tetrathiafulvalene (TTF)
- New stable donor–acceptor dyads for molecular electronics
- A comparative theoretical study of exciton-dissociation and charge-recombination processes in oligothiophene/fullerene and oligothiophene/perylenediimide complexes for organic solar cells
- A solid-state switch containing an electrochemically switchable bistable poly[n]rotaxane
- Preparation, magnetism and electronic structures of cadmium technetates
- Computational assessment of 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions to graphene
- C60 dimers connected through pleiadene bridges: fullerenes talking to each other
- Dual [proton]/[hole] mixed valence in a molecular metal: balancing chemical activity in the solid state by tapping into a molecular hole reservoir
- Magnetostructural studies of palladium(II) and platinum(II) complexes of verdazyl radicals
- Liquid crystalline phthalocyanine–fullerene dyads
- Side chain engineering of fused aromatic thienopyrazine based low band-gap polymers for enhanced charge carrier mobility
- Optimizing reaction conditions for synthesis of electron donor-[60]fullerene interlocked multiring systems
- Mixed selenium-sulfur fused ring systems as building blocks for novel polymers used in field effect transistors
- Photoinduced electron transfer in a clicked fullerene–porphyrin conjugate
- Synthesis, crystallization, electrochemistry and single crystal X-ray analysis of a methoxy-substituted-tris-phenalenyl based neutral radical
- Using bis(pinacolato)diboron to improve the quality of regioregular conjugated co-polymers
- Protection of lithium metal surfaces using tetraethoxysilane
- Small band gap copolymers based on furan and diketopyrrolopyrrole for field-effect transistors and photovoltaic cells
Merry Christmas from Journal of Materials Chemistry!
We would like to wish you all a merry Christmas and a happy New Year! The Editorial office will be closed from 24th December 2010 and will re-open on January 4th 2011.
We’re looking forward to 2011, which will see some great themed issues, the 2011 Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship and much more! Don’t miss out – sign up to our blog’s RSS feed!
from the Journal of Materials Chemistry Editorial team
2011 Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship – Call for Nominations
Call for Nominations!
I am pleased to announce that the 2011 Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship is open for nominations. This annual lectureship honours a scientist who has made a significant contribution to the field of materials chemistry.
Qualification
To be eligible for the Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship, the candidate should be in the earlier stages of their scientific career, typically within 10 years of attaining their doctorate or equivalent degree, and will have made a significant contribution to the field.
Description
The recipient of the lectureship will be asked to present a lecture three times, one of which will be located in the home country of the recipient. The Journal of Materials Chemistry Editorial Office will provide the sum of £1000 to the recipient for travel and accommodation costs. The lectureship recipient will be presented with the lectureship certificate at one of the three lectures. They will also be asked to contribute a lead article to the journal and will have their work showcased on the back cover of the issue in which their article is published.
Selection
The recipient of the lectureship will be selected and endorsed by the Journal of Materials Chemistry Editorial Board.
The 2010 lectureship was won by Dan Luo, Cornell University, USA.
Nominations
Those wishing to make a nomination should send details of the nominee including a brief C.V. (no longer than 2 pages) together with a letter supporting the nomination (no longer than 2 pages), to the Journal of Materials Chemistry Editorial Office by 18th February 2011. Self nomination is not permitted.
Hot Article: Triazole–pyridine ligands: a novel approach to chromophoric iridium arrays
This ‘Hot’ paper describes the development of a novel click chemistry approach for the modular construction of tuneable multichromophoric light emitters. To make these iridium complexes, one, two or three triazole–pyridine units were effectively built into the heteroaromatic macromolecule using versatile acetylene- and azide-functionalised precursors.
The approach described by the team from the Netherlands is of interest for the design and construction of various light-emitting materials by covalent linking of different chromophores, including versatile tuning of the material properties, using ‘click’ chemistry. One example of such an application was demonstrated; two iridium centres showing ‘yellow’ emission and one fluorene unit showing ‘blue’ emission were combined via the covalent linkage to provide a white-light emitter.
Interested in knowing more? Read for free until January 18th.
Triazole–pyridine ligands: a novel approach to chromophoric iridium arrays
Michal Juríček, Marco Felici, Pablo Contreras-Carballada, Ján Lauko, Sandra Rodríguez Bou, Paul H. J. Kouwer, Albert M. Brouwer and Alan E. Rowan
J. Mater. Chem., 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0JM03117H, Paper
Hot Article: Enhancing the gas and energy storage properties of carbide-derived carbons
Thermal halogenation of a wide range of metal carbides provides a simple route to a class of so-called carbide-derived carbon (CDC) materials. The porosity of the CDCs, which is mainly in the microporous regime, may be modulated by the choice of metal carbide precursor and synthesis process, the maximum surface area achieved is only up to 2500 m2g−1, which limits their use in gas storage or in electrochemical capacitor applications that require larger surface areas.
This Highlight article is focused on what has and can be done to enhance the textural properties of CDCs via further post-synthesis treatments and the ramifications of such modifications on their gas/energy storage capacity. The main developments in physical and chemical activation of CDCs and consequences on gas and energy storage are summarised by the authors from the University of Nottingham, UK, and Instituto Nacional del Carbón, Spain.
Interested in knowing more? Read for free until January 14th.
Activation of carbide-derived carbons: a route to materials with enhanced gas and energy storage properties
M. Sevilla and R. Mokaya
J. Mater. Chem., 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0JM03347B, Highlight
Issue 2 now online with a flowery front cover
The second issue of Journal of Materials Chemistry in 2011 is now online. The front cover features a communication from Lifang Jiao and co-workers based at Nankai University in China. The paper, entitled ‘Novel flower-like CoS hierarchitectures: one-pot synthesis and electrochemical properties’ describes the synthesis, by a facile solvothermal method, of novel 3D flower-like CoS hierarchitectures and CoS microspheres which display good electrochemical properties.
Thinking of submitting to Journal of Materials Chemistry in 2011? Sumbit online here.