Archive for January, 2013

NJC’s new Associate Editor is from Brazil

  

Jairton Dupont

Prof. Jairton Dupont, NJC's new Associate Editor

We are delighted to announce the appointment of Jairton Dupont as NJC‘s Associate Editor for the Americas. He is a professor of the Institute of Chemistry at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS) located in Porte Alegra in Brazil’s southernmost state. He replaces Prof. Michael Scott (formerly at the University of Florida and now at NSF). 

Jaïrton has close ties to France and the UK (NJC‘s two “homes”), having received his Ph.D. degree from the Université Louis Pasteur of Strasbourg (France). After a period as a post-doc at the University of Oxford (UK), he joined the UFRGS, taking up his current position in 1992. His research interests are mainly centered on ionic liquids with special emphasis in catalysis, nanomaterials and alternative energies. Jaïrton has authored well over 200 scientific works, including an organometallic chemistry textbook. 

 Among his various distinctions, Jaïrton is a member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences and he has received many awards such as the Humboldt Research Award, the Conrado Wessel Award, the TWAS Award and the Brazilian Gran Cruz. He has returned to the “Old World” on numerous occasions, including as an invited professor at ULP, the University of Nuremberg-Erlangen (Germany) and Universidad de Alcala de Henares and Rovira i Virgili (Spain). Click here to see his CV (in Portuguese).  

Jaïrton’s commitment to excellence in scientific publishing is based on the following: “The worldwide dissemination of scientific achievements relies mostly on periodicals and therefore reputable professional journals are the most significant platform tool in this process. New Journal of Chemistry is certainly one of the platforms for the dissemination of the most important scientific global achievements in chemistry in their whole diversity.”  

I extend a warm welcome to Jaïrton on behalf of the NJC Editorial Board, the editors of NJC, RSC Publishing and the CNRS.  

To submit your work to NJC, click here (or paste this link into your browser: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/njc). 

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Meet Our Authors from the January 2013 Issue of NJC

Prof. George Gokel

Our first author is George Gokel, a former NJC Associate Editor, who is Distinguished Professor of Science and Director of the Center for Nanoscience at the University of Missouri-St. Louis. George’s research is in the field of supramolecular and biological chemistry of membrane active and channel-forming compounds.

The article by George and his co-authors looks into the little-studied branched-chain chemistry of pyrogallolarenes. These compounds have led to at least one remarkable nanotube structure. The group’s NJC paper addresses the membrane behavior of resorcinarenes that have hard-to-obtain, very long chains that are aligned (rccc). The typical synthesis of pyrogallols depends on crystallization of a single product from a complex mixture. Long-chain pyrogallols or resorcinarenes crystallize poorly owing to their extended hydrocarbon chains. Jochen Mattay had previously prepared and characterized very long chain compounds containing varied headgroups. The collaboration with the group of Gokel probed the monolayer behavior (Langmuir trough) and membrane activity (bilayer clamp) to obtain new information about the amphiphilic behavior of these difficult-to-obtain derivatives.

One of George’s favorite films is KPAX. In this film, Kevin Spacey claims to be a tourist from the planet KPAX. Jeff Bridges plays the psychiatrist who seeks conventional explanations for a range of phenomena that point to Spacey’s alien origins. George applies the moral of this film to science: “It humbles one to think that we often try to make our data fit our preconceived notions rather than applying Sherlock Holmes’ advice in the Sign of the Four that ‘when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.'”

Properties of long alkyl-chained resorcin[4]arenes in bilayers and on the Langmuir trough by Priyanka Ogirala, Saeedeh Negin, Ceno Agena, Christian Schäfer, Thomas Geisler, Jochen Mattay and George W. Gokel, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 105–111. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40337D

Luca (on the right) indulging in one of his passions with two friends.

The second NJC board member is Luca Prodi, who is a Full Professor in the Chemistry Department “G. Ciamician” of the University of Bologna.

Luca explains how his research interests have expanded over the years, while remaining centered on light: “I have been always fascinated by luminescence-related processes. Because of this curiosity, I directed my interest to the design of luminescent chemosensors and labels, especially for biological applications. The advent of nanotachnology has allowed the design of brighter systems, and for this reason I have recently started the study of nanoparticles, in particular those possessing a silica core. The possibility to design multicomponent systems opens up a huge number of strategies to improve the analytical signal. It is not possible to get bored studying these materials!”

All of these topics come together in the Focus review contributed by the Prodi group. “The design of chemosensors able to give information about the concentration of a given analyte can have a tremendous impact on many disciplines, such as medical diagnosis, molecular biology, and environmental monitoring, to cite only a few. Since the use of chemosensors based on silica nanoparticles is, to our opinion, very promising for obtaining systems featuring better performances, we have reviewed some interesting examples of what is reported in the literature indicating also some perspectives in the field.”

Reading is one of Luca’s favourite activities besides chemistry (and cyclingsee the photo!). He notes that he is a  “curiosity-driven reader” so his interests span many areas but in particular he likes detective stories by northern Europe writers, while one of his favourite Italian authors is Andrea Camilleri; Luca particularly enjoyed reading the first novel by this author, introducing Inspector Montalbano in La Forma dell’Acqua (The Shape of Water—sounds quite fitting for a chemist!).

Luminescent chemosensors based on silica nanoparticles for the detection of ionic species by Marco Montalti, Enrico Rampazzo, Nelsi Zaccheroni and Luca Prodi, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 28–34. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40673J

David visiting Mgarr in Malta, with a view of the harbor and church.

Lastly let us meet David C. Magri, a recently appointed Senior Lecturer in the Department of Chemistry, University of Malta (Malta is a small archipelago in the Mediterranean Sea, with a long and fascinating history, having been ruled by a succession of powers going from the Phoenicians to the British crown). Getting back to David, his research is in the area of luminescent sensors and molecular logic gates.

In their NJC paper, David with student Thomas report the first examples of molecular AND logic gates that can simultaneously measure the pH and the pE (redox ability of a solution). In honour of Marcel Pourbaix, a formerly renowned electrochemist, they have named them Pourbaix sensors. Such probes could be useful in environmental monitoring, and also in cell biology and medicine, for example, as high concentrations of protons and redox active metal ions, such as iron, have been linked to certain types of cancer.

With a background in both photochemistry and electrochemistry David often contemplated how to intertwine elements from both to the field of molecular information processing.  Fluorescent logic gates for pH and pE was the result.

A book that has left its mark on David from his graduate training is The Structure of Scientific Revolutions by Thomas S. Kuhn (published in 1962 by the University of Chicago Press).  David explains: “The book explores the psychology of science dealing with the acceptance of new paradigms.  I would recommend all researchers give it a read.”

‘Pourbaix sensors’: a new class of fluorescent pE–pH molecular AND logic gates based on photoinduced electron transfer by Thomas J. Farrugia and David C. Magri, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 148–151. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40732A

We hope you enjoyed meeting some of your fellow chemists. Check back next month on the NJC blog to see who we’ll interview next!

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New Journal of Chemistry issue 1 now online

We welcome you to January’s “All aboard“ issue of New Journal of Chemistry.

Featuring in this issue:

This month NJC highlights the research of NJC’s Editorial Board members. Sixteen current members of the NJC Editorial Board have contributed 10 research articles and 5 reviews, among them 2 Focus reviews and 3 Perspectives reviews.

In all, the twenty-eight articles in this issue, including Focus and Perspective reviews, Letters and full Papers, feature high-quality, original and significant research works in the areas of coordination and supramolecular chemistry, organometallic chemistry, catalysis, sensing, nanostructures, material sciences, electrochemistry, synthetic chemistry, crystallographic engineering and much more.

The outside cover of this month’s issue highlights the work of Debbie Crans and Michael Johnson (USA) on vanadium complexes in water-in-oil reverse micelles.

In their study, the authors were exploring the complexation reaction between a ligand (catechol) and a metal ion (aqueous vanadium(V); [VO2(OH2)4]+) along with the reverse reactions; aquation of the corresponding vanadium(V)–catechol complex.

Stabilization of a vanadium(V)–catechol complex by compartmentalization and reduced solvation inside reverse micelles by Brant G. Lemons, David T. Richens, Ashley Anderson, Myles Sedgwick, Debbie C. Crans and Michael D. Johnson, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 75-81, DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40524E.

The inside front cover features work by Takashi Kato and co-workers (Japan) who present the first example of bisphenylsulfone- based molecular assemblies. Thermotropic columnar liquid crystals and fibrous aggregates are formed by 1D self-assembly of sulfonyl moieties through the dipole–dipole interactions.

The electric field alignment of the sulfone-based columnar liquid crystals has been successfully achieved.

Bisphenylsulfone-based molecular assemblies: polar columnar liquid crystals aligned in electric fields and fibrous aggregates in organic solvents by Masafumi Yoshio, Reiku Konishi, Takeshi Sakamoto and Takashi Kato, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 143-147, DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40681K

Hot articles in this themed issue:

* Photochromism of novel chromenes constrained to be part of [2.2]paracyclophane: remarkable ‘phane’ effects on the colored o-quinonoid intermediates by Jarugu Narasimha Moorthy, Susovan Mandal and Amrit Kumar, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 82-88, DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40575J

Precursors for pyromellit-bridged silica sol–gel hybrid materials by Stefan Pfeifer, Anke Schwarzer, Dana Schmidt, Erica Brendler, Michael Veith and Edwin Kroke, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 169-180, DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40538E

Self-assembly of graphene oxide on the surface of aluminum foil by Qingye Liu, Meng He, Xiaojuan Xu, Lina Zhang and Junping Yu; New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 181-187, DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40493A

Mixed-solvothermal synthesis, structures, luminescent and surface photovoltage properties of four new transition metal diphosphonates with a 3D supramolecular structure by Hui Tian, Yan-Yu Zhu, Zhen-Gang Sun, Fei Tong, Jiang Zhu, Wei Chu, Shou-Hui Sun and Ming-Jing Zheng, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 212-219, DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40737J

Rapid preparation of high surface area iron oxide and alumina nanoclusters through a soft templating approach of sol–gel precursors by Fernando Hung-Low, Geneva R. Peterson, Marauo Davis and Louisa J. Hope-Weeks, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 245-249, DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40781G

To be alerted to each new issue of the NJC journal, sign-up for the FREE Contents list email alert.

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Photocurrent response of strontium titanate films decorated with carbon quantum dots

In this NJC Hot paper Chinese researchers (Soochow University and Jiangsu University) describe a facile route for the fabrication of porous and solid SrTiO3 films by a template-free hydrothermal method using TiO2 NTs precursor and loading CQDs on the SrTiO3 surface by electrodeposition. As a result, the CQDs–SrTiO3 is responsive under near NIR irradiation owing to the energy upconversion ability of the CQDs. Based on the their results, a possible electron–hole transfer mechanism was also assumed.

Enhanced photoelectrochemical response in SrTiO3 films decorated with carbon quantum dots by Fang Wang, Yang Liu, Zheng Ma, Haitao Li, Zhenhui Kang and Mingrong Shen; New J. Chem., 2013, Advance Article; DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40988G, Letter

Interested to know more? Why not read the full article now and let us know your thoughts and comments below!

This Hot Article will be free to access for a period of 4 weeks.

To stay up-to-date with the latest NJC developments, sign up to its free table-of-contents email alert!

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