Issue 4 of Materials Horizons is now online!

We are delighted to announce that the fourth issue of Materials Horizons has been published online! Showcasing some of the most exciting research across the breadth of the materials field, issue 4 includes articles such as:

Find the full issue here. We hope you enjoy reading it!

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Congratulations Seth & Zhenan!

Professor Seth Marder, Chair of the Materials Horizons Editorial Board, has been internationally recognised by the Materials Research Society as an outstanding member with sustained and distinguished contributions to the field of materials science.  They have recognised his work by honouring him as a Fellow of the Materials Research Society.   Established in 2008, MRS Fellows are expected to demonstrate a dedication to the advancement of materials research and is a lifetime appointment.

Professor Marder (Georgia Institute of Technology) was selected “For seminal contributions to fundamental understanding of the relationships between the chemical structure of organic molecules and their electronic and optical, including nonlinear optical, properties.”  He is currently working on research into organic materials, optical materials, electronics materials and surface modification.

The Materials Horizons Editorial Office would like to extend our personal congratulations to Professor Marder on this outstanding honour and take the opportunity to thank him for the work he does as the Chair of the Materials Horizons Editorial Board.

For more information on Professor Marder, please visit his home page.

We would also like to take this opportunity to congratulate Professor Zhenan Bao, Chemical Science Associate Editor and Materials Horizons Advisory Board member, who has also been honoured as a MRS Fellow this year.  They join the long list of people honoured by the Materials Research Society for their work in materials science.

Congratulations Seth & Zhenan!

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Mat4Energy

MAT4ENERGY, international Workshop on Materials for Energy Applications, Grenoble, France, 16-18 June 2014

This workshop aims at giving an up-to-date description and review of the different materials and technologies currently being implemented for various energy applications, with a special focus on renewables. It will be organized in three main blocks: materials for energy conversion, materials for energy storage, materials for an efficient use of energy.  The 5 Plenary sessions will cover the fundamentals of each thematic axis.  Related topics such as modeling and characterization will be tackled both through the plenary talks and the lectures.

In addition, the symposium will also provide an overview of the most promising materials being investigated at present.

All participants are invited to present their work in a poster session. The best posters of the conference, regardless of the field, will be awarded by APL Materials, the Royal Society of Chemistry and their new journal Materials Horizons http://bit.ly/1noj1K8

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Issue 3 of Materials Horizons is now online!

We are delighted to announce that the third issue of Materials Horizons has been published online! Showcasing some of the most exciting research across the breadth of the materials field, issue 3 includes articles such as:

Find the full issue here. We hope you enjoy reading it!

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Update to Communication Article guidelines

Materials Horizons Communications must now include a separate paragraph (no more than 200 words) concisely demonstrating the new insights of the work. This text should highlight conceptual advances and not be a summary of the work reported, as in the article abstract. The text should be easy to read and accessible to the broad readership of the journal.

For more information, Materials Horizons article guidelines can be found here.

When will I see a change?
This change has taken affect from now and is applicable for all new Communication article submissions. Communication articles currently under review or accepted and going through production are not subject to these new guidelines. This new ‘Conceptual insights’ box will appear on the first page of Communication articles.

Follow the latest journal news on Twitter @MaterHoriz or go to our Facebook page.

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Issue 2 of Materials Horizons is now online!

All articles published in Materials Horizons benefit from wide exposure, with free access upon registration to all content published during 2014 and 2015

We are delighted to announce that the second issue of Materials Horizons has been published online! Showcasing some of the most exciting research across the breadth of the materials field, issue 2 includes articles such as:

Find the full issue here. We hope you enjoy reading it!

Follow the latest journal news on Twitter @MaterHoriz or go to our Facebook page.

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Introducing Materials Horizons Scientific Editor Thuc Quyen Nguyen

Thuc-Quyen Nguyen is a professor in the Center for Polymers and Organic Solids and Chemistry & Biochemistry Department at University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB). She received her Ph.D. degree in physical chemistry from the University of California, Los Angeles in 2001 under the supervision of Professor Benjamin Schwartz. Her thesis focused on photophysics of conducting polymers using ultrafast spectroscopy.

From 2001 to 2004, she was a research associate in the Department of Chemistry and the Nanocenter at Columbia University working with Professors Louis Brus and Colin Nuckolls on molecular self-assembly, nanoscale characterization, and molecular electronics. She also spent time at IBM Research Center at T. J. Watson working with Richard Martel and Phaedon Avouris. In 2004, she started an assistant professorship at UCSB and was promoted to full professor in 2011.

Her current research interests are structure-function-property relationships in organic semiconductors, electronic properties of conjugated polyelectrolytes, interfaces in optoelectronic devices, charge transport in organic semiconductors and across membranes, device physics, and nanoscale characterization of organic solar cells. Her group has published over 120 peer reviewed papers. Recognition for her research includes the 2005 Office of Naval Research Young Investigator Award, the 2006 National Science Foundation CAREER Award, the 2007 Harold Plous Award (one of the UCSB’s two most prestigious faculty honors), the 2008 Camille Dreyfus Teacher Scholar Award, the 2009 Alfred Sloan Research Fellows, and the 2010 National Science Foundation American Competitiveness and Innovation Fellows.

Her recent papers include:

A structure–property–performance investigation of perylenediimides as electron accepting materials in organic solar cells
Michele Guide, Sara Pla, Alexander Sharenko, Peter Zalar, Fernando Fernández-Lázaro, Ángela Sastre-Santos and Thuc-Quyen Nguyen
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys, 2013, 15, 18894-18899

Towards environmentally friendly processing of molecular semiconductors
Zachary B. Henson, Peter Zalar, Xiaofen Chen, Gregory C. Welch, Thuc-Quyen Nguyen and Guillermo C. Bazan
J. Mater. Chem. A, 2013, 1, 11117-11120

Regioregular pyridyl[2,1,3]thiadiazole-co-indacenodithiophene conjugated polymers
Wen Wen, Lei Ying, Ben B. Y. Hsu, Yuan Zhang, Thuc-quyen Nguyen and Guillermo C. Bazan
Chem. Commun., 2013, 49, 7192-7194

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Materials Horizons author profile: Jean-Luc Bredas

Materials Horizons Advisory Board member, Jean-Luc Brédas, is the author of the journal’s first Focus article, Mind the gap! Focus articles are educational pieces, intended to explain or clarify topics relevant to the understanding of materials science. In his article, Professor Brédas seeks to clear up the confusion surrounding the many types of energy gap relevant to organic materials, and calls for a more rigorous use of the appropriate terminology. Here we find out more about the author, and why he chose to write this article for Materials Horizons.

Jean-Luc Brédas is Regents’ Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry at Georgia Institute of Technology. He began his research career at the Université de Namur, Belgium, where he completed a Ph.D. in Theoretical Chemistry.  Since then, he has held positions at Université de Mons, Belgium, the University of Arizona, USA, and King Abdulaziz University in Saudi Arabia. He is the author or co-author of over 950 scientific papers and has presented over 500 invited talks at scientific meetings and seminars.

Professor Brédas has been awarded numerous prizes in recognition of his work, including the Triennal Prize of the Royal Society of Chemistry, Belgium, (1991), the Francqui Prize (1997), the Descartes Prize of the European Commission (2003) and the Georgia Institute of Technology Outstanding Faculty Research Author Award (2008). In 2013, he received the American Physical Society David Adler Lectureship Award in Materials Physics.  He has been a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry since 2008.

The research activities of Professor Brédas’ group are focused on the computational characterization and design of novel organic materials of relevance for organic electronics and photonics.

What was the motivation to write your Materials Horizons Focus article?
There were two major reasons: The first is the original concept behind these Focus articles, which I believe is unique to Materials Horizons. The second is that many of my colleagues and myself were becoming increasingly frustrated by the lack of rigor surrounding the use of common terminologies in materials research articles, in particular with regard to energy gaps and energy levels in electro-active organic materials. Hence, when Seth Marder came to me with a proposition to write such a Focus article, he met no resistance!

At which upcoming conferences may our readers meet you?
In the spring, I’ll participate in SPIE Photonics West in San Francisco, the ACS National Meeting in Dallas, and the MRS Spring Meeting (again in San Francisco).

How do you spend your spare time?
Soccer, or should say much more appropriately football, is my main passion besides science. I still try to play as much as I can especially with my students. Also, I very much enjoy tending to the four fish tanks I have at home, with fish (cichlids) mainly from the Central Africa Lakes: Tanganyika and Malawi.

Which profession would you choose if you were not a scientist?
This is a tough question because I cannot picture myself doing something else really. The fulfillment that scientific research, teaching students, and making friends all over the world bring, would be in my mind very difficult to match. But to answer the question, maybe I’d like to be in the sports business, for instance as a commentator.

Mind the gap!

Jean-Luc Brédas
Mater. Horiz., 2014, 1, 17-19
DOI: 10.1039/C3MH00098B

‘The energy gap is a critical material parameter. Here, we illustrate the concepts behind the various flavors of energy gaps relevant for organic materials and call for a more consistent use of appropriate terminologies and procedures.’

 

 

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Materials Horizons author profile: Stefan Bon

Stefan A. F. Bon is an associate professor in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Warwick, UK. He studied Chemical Engineering at the Technical University of Eindhoven (TUE), the Netherlands (cum laude, 1989-1993). He has a background in the mechanistic and kinetic development of (living) radical polymerizations (1993-2005). Since 2005 he has established himself as an international player in the area of polymer colloids, and continues to innovate in the area of supracolloidal chemistry. Since 2009 he has given more than 70 invited talks. He is an IUPAC fellow, and the current chair of the UK Polymer Colloids Forum (UKPCF) and of the International Polymer Colloids Group (IPCG). 

Why did you choose Materials Horizons to publish your exciting work?
We chose Materials Horizons for this article as we really liked the vision behind this new Royal Society of Chemistry journal in that it focusses on new conceptual insights in material science, spanning across the breaths of all the more traditional disciplines, such as chemistry and physics. Our paper draws from knowledge on sol-gel synthesis, Pickering stabilisation, emulsion templating, uses heterogeneous catalysis, and blends it with physical concepts and understanding on motion on the microscopic scale. Chemotaxis is common in nature and to demonstrate that our matchstick shaped particles could undergo this directional form of self-propulsion was very exciting. This mash-up of scientific disciplines for our work made Materials Horizons THE journal to publish our work in.

How did you find the Materials Horizons publication process?
As can be said for all scientific journals published by the Royal Society of Chemistry, the submission and review process is very professional and fast. I was impressed with the turn around time and the excellent comments of the reviewers made. I also very much value the promotion the Materials Horizons team has done after our paper went live. Thanks very much!

What topics would you like to see covered in future issues of Materials Horizons? Are there any particularly related to Focus articles, which are educational articles, designed to provide the reader with a sense of a concept from an area of materials science?
This is a tough question as material science is broad, but in short: “stuff that amazes the reader” I really hope that the journal becomes a platform for scientific discoveries with a conceptual wow-factor. Adding spatial control to self-assembly of molecules or particles, building a synthetic cell which could operate as a chemical production plant, a flexible solar cell with a life-span of years maintaining high conversion efficiencies, etc
It would be great if Focus articles could report on a topic in a way that it provides an almost synergistic portrait drawn from knowledge of material scientists of different scientific backgrounds.

Tell us more about your research
The BonLab undertakes research through a combination of polymer chemistry, soft matter/fluid physics, and chemical engineering. We study the chemistry and physics of colloidal systems in which molecular and/or colloidal entities can be assembled into more complex supracolloidal structures. We are interested in the synthesis of particles and macromolecules with a design tailored to trigger and control motility and assembly, the development of methods to (self)-organise colloidal matter, the understanding of the interactions involved between molecular and colloidal building blocks and potential macroscopic substrates. We find it important that our technology can be scaled-up and is of use in a variety of industrial applications ranging from sensors and devices, coatings and adhesives, to food, personal care, agricultural and biological systems. The BonLab is predominantly funded by industry to tackle a variety of problems for applications ranging from food, coatings, concrete and adhesives, to personal care formulations, agricultural formulations, and binders and dispersants.

Stephan Bonn’s Communication article Chemotaxis of catalytic silica–manganese oxide “matchstick” particles is free to access online!  

Chemotaxis of catalytic silica–manganese oxide “matchstick” particles
Adam R. Morgan, Alan B. Dawson, Holly S. Mckenzie, Thomas S. Skelhon, Richard Beanland, Henry P. W. Franks and Stefan A. F. Bon  
Mater. Horiz., 2014, Advance Article DOI: 10.1039/C3MH00003F

Silica-based “matchstick” colloids with a catalytic head undergo chemotaxis in water using hydrogen peroxide as the fuel.
 
 
 
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Professor Rao – Bharat Ratna 2014

Professor C. N. R. Rao, one of India’s highly regarded scientists, has been conferred the honour of the Bharat Ratna for 2014.  This is India’s highest civilian award and is seldom awarded.  Professor Rao is the third scientist and first chemist ever to receive the honour.

At an age when other people have relaxed into retirement, Professor Rao still spends several hours a day in his laboratory and has been in the running for a Nobel Prize for many years, showing his dedication and passion for his work.  He also co-authors books with his wife with the aim of making chemistry more accessible for children.  When asked in an interview with New Delhi Television what is required to succeed as a scientist in India, Professor Rao responded “stamina, tenacity, doggedness and perseverance.  Also a little intelligence is useful!”

The Materials Horizons Editorial Office would like to extend our personal congratulations to Professor Rao on his outstanding achievement and take the opportunity to thank him for the work he does as an Editorial Board member for the journal.

For more information on Professor Rao, please read his author profile here.

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