Author Archive

2011 NJC Symposium: New Directions in Chemistry

The 2011 NJC Symposium: New Directions in Chemistry will feature talks by eight well-known chemists, all members of NJC‘s editorial board, working in different areas of chemistry (biochemistry, coordination chemistry, organic chemistry, computational chemistry). These presentations will highlight the contributions of chemistry to a variety of challenges faced by our society today (in fields as diverse as the environment, health, electronics, etc.).

When: April 11-12, 2011
Where: ISIS Building on the Esplanade Campus of the University of Strasbourg (Sciences Faculties)
Organizers: Prof. Mir Wais Hosseini (Strasbourg) and Dr Denise Parent (Montpellier)
Sponsors: NJC, CNRS Institute of Chemistry, RSC Publishing, University of Strasbourg
Registration: the symposium is free and open to all interested persons. For organisational purposes we ask you to register your attendance by sending an email to njc@univ-montp2.fr.

The detailed program is given below.

Monday, April 11th (session 1)

16.30 Helen Hailes (University College London, UK) “The use of enzymes in synthesis”
17.10 Peter Junk (Monash University, Australia) “Rare earths as potential corrosion inhibitors”
17.50 Michael Scott (University of Florida, USA) “Design and synthesis of soft donor ligands for selective binding of harmful f-elements”

Tuesday, April 12th (sessions 2 and 3)

9.00 Barbara Nawrot (Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland) “Chemically modified small inhibitory nucleic acids”
9.40 Wais Hosseini (University of Strasbourg, France) “Molecular turnstiles”
10.20 Fabrizia Grepioni (University of Bologna, Italy) “The growing world of crystal forms”
11.00 Break
11.20 Odile Eisenstein (University of Montpellier, France) “Determining reaction mechanisms in organometallic chemistry with computational chemistry”
12.00 Jerry Atwood (University of Missouri-Columbia, USA) “New understanding of the organic solid state”

Feel free to attend 1, 2, 3 or more lectures, as you wish.

For further information and updates, please contact Dr Denise Parent at the NJC Editorial Office: njc@uni-montp2.fr.

Travel and hotel arrangements are the attendee’s responsibility. A list of local hotels is available upon request to valerie.rey@unistra.fr.

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Meet Our Authors

This month the NJC Blog inaugurates a new monthly feature, which will present a few authors from the month’s issue, selected by one of the NJC Editors to highlight the diversity in NJC. Below, you can meet my choice of 5 authors from the February 2011 issue, presented in reverse alphabetical order (let the Zs be first for once).

Our first profile is of Professor Xiangyang Shi, who is on the faculty of the College of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology of Donghua University in Shanghai (P. R. China). “My current research interests are focused on dendrimer-based nanomedicine, and electrospun polymer nanofiber-based technology for applications in both regenerative medicine and environmental sciences.”

In his NJC paper, Xiangyang and his coworkers report the fabrication of uniform and water-stable electrospun polyethyleneimine/polyvinyl alcohol nanofibers by optimizing electrospinning and crosslinking conditions. The formed nanofibers display a super dye sorption capability, providing a unique material for environmental remediation applications. The interdisciplinary nature of the work, involving polymer chemistry, nanotechnology, and environmental sciences made NJC a logical choice in the authors’ eyes. In addition, they appreciate that “the NJC review and publication process are pretty fast.”

Outside of the lab, Xiangyang’s favorite activity is travel with family. A recent trip to Beijing allowed his two young sons to discover famous scenic places such as the Great Wall, the Summer Palace, and the Forbidden City. Xiangyang comments that this trip they “started to feel a part of Chinese History”.

“Fabrication and characterization of water-stable electrospun polyethyleneimine/polyvinyl alcohol nanofibers with super dye sorption capability” by Xu Fang, Shili Xiao, Mingwu Shen, Rui Guo, Shanyuan Wang and Xiangyang Shi, New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 360-368; DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00764A

Alejandro Pérez-Rodríguez is Full Professor and Head of Laboratory at the IREC Catalonia Institute for Energy Research in Barcelona, Spain. He is currently working on the development of materials and processes for advanced inorganic thin film photovoltaic technologies. His group’s contribution to this month’s issue describes the development of Raman scattering techniques for quality control and process monitoring in chalcogenide photovoltaic technologies. This is applied as an in situ tool for monitoring the electrochemical synthesis of chalcopyrite absorbers under real time conditions. This “application of chemistry to a real world problem” made the work particularly suitable for NJC.


Outside the lab, Alejandro enjoys reading and swimming. “My favourite writers are classical English romantics (Jane Austen, Charlotte Bronte, Mary Shelley, …) and crime novels from Conan Doyle and Georges Simenon. In Spanish, I like very much the works from South American authors as Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Isabel Allende.” Currently Alejandro is reading The Bunderbrooks by Thomas Mann.

“Process monitoring of chalcopyrite photovoltaic technologies by Raman spectroscopy: an application to low cost electrodeposition based processes” by Victor Izquierdo-Roca, Xavier Fontané, Edgardo Saucedo, Jesus Salvador Jaime-Ferrer, Jacobo Álvarez-García, Alejandro Pérez-Rodríguez, Veronica Bermudez and Joan Ramon Morante, New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 453-460; DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00794C


The next author is Christine Paul-Roth, Associate Professor at the National Institute of Applied Sciences (INSA) in Rennes, France. Her paper is the fruit of a collaboration between J. A. G. Williams, working in Durham University, on highly luminescent platinum complexes, V. Fattori from Bologna University, a well-known specialist in the elaboration of OLEDs, and herself for the syntheses of the complexes. More generally, her research centres around the design and elaboration of multifunctional porphyrins.

“Together we have chosen NJC to present this work because of the very large diversity and the high quality of the articles published in the journal. Also, the fact that it corresponds to a multidisciplinary (and international) collaboration between different groups having different specialties makes the work of interest to a more diverse readership.”

The mother of 3 school-age children, Christine’s favourite activity is to visit the library to share books with them.

“Platinum and palladium complexes of fluorenyl porphyrins as red phosphors for light-emitting devices” by Samuel Drouet, Christine O. Paul-Roth, Valeria Fattori, Massimo Cocchi and J. A. Gareth Williams, New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 438-444; DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00561D


Lajos Kovács is a senior research fellow in the Department of Medicinal Chemistry, University of Szeged (Hungary). His latest contribution to NJC exemplifies the biological orientation of his chemistry research. The paper describes their investigation of 3-substituted xanthines as guanine analogues in self-assembly to yield tetrads or higher order structures in the presence of cations. “We have been pleased to see that our computational approach can be nicely complemented by experimental data (MS, NMR) supporting the existence of tetrameric and octameric aggregates involving 3-methylxanthine, the simplest representative of the above family.” Their previous positive experience with NJC decided them on publishing again in the journal.

Lajos’ non-scientific interests include reading, hiking and photography. Lajos notes that near Szeged there are not many places for hiking but that he takes pictures regularly when traveling. “One of my favourite places is Scotland and I send herewith a picture of mine from Isle of Skye in the Inner Hebrides.”

“3-Substituted xanthines as promising candidates for quadruplex formation: computational, synthetic and analytical studies” by János Szolomájer, Gábor Paragi, Gyula Batta, Célia Fonseca Guerra, F. Matthias Bickelhaupt, Zoltán Kele, Petra Pádár, Zoltán Kupihár and Lajos Kovács, New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 476-482; DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00612B

The last profile is of Canada Research Chair in Green Chemistry Philip Jessop, who is a Professor at Queen’s University and the GreenCentre in Kingston (Ontario, Canada). As you might guess, his field is green chemistry and more specifically the chemistry of CO2 and H2 gases. “If H2 storage is ever going to work, I really believe it needs to be in liquid carriers, because liquids are pumpable and storable without pressure. But conventional liquid carriers of H2 don’t carry much H2, so we have been exploring creative ways of solving that.” On his reasons for publishing his work in NJC, Philip comments: “It’s always nice to publish in the same forum as others in the same field.”

To take a break from his scientific life in the fast lane, Philip, who loves nature, stalks wildlife with his camera. “The most important thing in my mind is the perfect setting and pose. Getting this heron and the setting sun lined up perfectly, before my movements scared the heron away, was tricky.”

“The effect of temperature, catalyst and sterics on the rate of N-heterocycle dehydrogenation for hydrogen storage” by Darrell Dean, Boyd Davis and Philip G. Jessop, New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 417-422; DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00511H

I hope you’ve enjoyed getting to know some of your fellow chemists a little better. (It was certainly fun for me.) Clicking on the links above will lead you to their papers, which illustrate diverse fields of chemistry and their applications to the solution of a variety of problems.

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NJC Dinner at Pacifichem

In the lovely Bali by the Sea Restaurant overlooking Waikiki beach, NJC Associate Editor Peter Junk hosted a group of speakers from three Pacifichem 2010 symposia for drinks and dinner. Many of the guests were authors in the NJC thematic issue on main group chemistry published earlier in the year (August 2010). Host-for-the-evening Peter thanked all present for their contributions and support. A special thanks went to Prof. Fumiyuki Ozawa of Kyoto for his great efforts with the thematic issue and organization of the dinner. Watching the sunset, the participants from around the world enjoyed excellent food and wine, while mingling and talking about…chemistry, what else!

Tilley, Ozawa, MarderSekiguchi, Junk & Junk

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October 2010 issue of NJC published

You can now browse the October issue of NJC on the website. The cover highlights a Perspective, by Andreas Schnepf at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, which reviews a novel class of cluster compounds in group 14 chemistry, exemplified by GenRm, to explore the transition from molecular to bulk properties.

Metalloid cluster compounds of germanium: novel structural motives on the way to elemental germanium! by Andreas Schnepf*
New J. Chem., 2010, 34, 2079-2092; DOI:10.1039/C0NJ00263A

We invite you to also take a look at some of the 34 other papers in this issue, covering topics as diverse as: gelation phenomena, sensors, water purification, drug uptake & release, mesoporous & nano materials, catalysis & reaction mechanisms, ionic liquids, aromatic sextet theory, conjugates for tumor imaging, molecular clusters, cyclophanes & cyclodextrins, lectin binding, dendrimers in DSSCs, purification of carbon nanotubes, organic synthesis, partitioning in biphasic systems, optically active supramolecules, paramagnetic complexes.

Why not sign-up for our table of contents e-alerts today to receive NJC issues direct to your inbox?

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New NJC Editorial Policy

In an editorial published in the October 2010 issue, NJC’s editors inform its readers, authors and reviewers about the new editorial policy now in place. The emphasis is on high quality, innovative work that is multi- or inter-disciplinary.

Authors have two formats in which to communicate their original research results: short Letters with a single message and longer full Papers recounting the full story.

Joining the Perspective reviews will be the short Focus reviews, highlighting a topic of current interest in chemistry.

You can read the full text of the editorial here.

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Laureates of NJC Interface Poster Prizes

IRT3NA Poster Prize winners

Ken Yamada & Gwladys Pourceau, winners in Lyon

Six young chemists are the laureates of the NJC Interface Poster Prizes awarded at three conferences this past summer.

Tatsuhiko Arai, Ph.D. student (M Fujita, University of Tokyo, Japan) was the winner at the 5th International Symposium on Macrocyclic and Supramolecular Chemistry held in Nara, Japan;
Anna Barnard, Ph.D. student (DK Smith, University of York, UK);
Xiaoxuan (Tracy) Liu, Ph.D. student (L Peng, co-tutorship between Wuhan University, China, and Université de la Méditerranée, France) and
Marek Maly, lecturer (J.E. Purkinje University, Czech Republic) were the
awardees at the 2nd International Symposium on Biological Applications of Dendrimers, which took place on the island of Porquerolles, France;
Gwladys Pourceau, Ph.D. student (F Morvan, University of Montpellier 2, France) and
Ken Yamada, Ph.D. student (M Sekine, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan)
were honored at the 19th International Roundtable on Nucleosides, Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids in Lyon, France.

Details of their research can be found at http://www.njc.cnrs.fr/spip.php?article20

Congratulations to all the winners from the NJC editorial team, with best wishes for continuing success in their research!

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New NJC Board Member from China appointed

 

Jiannian Yao

Prof Jiannian Yao

The CNRS Institute of Chemistry and RSC Publishing are pleased to announce the appointment of Prof. Jiannian Yao of the Chinese Academy of Sciences to the Editorial Board of NJC.

In accepting the invitation Prof. Yao replied:

“I am very glad to participate to the Editorial Board of the New Journal of Chemistry and to assist the Managing Editors in developing and promoting the journal in a variety of ways.”

Jiannian Yao was born in Fujian, P. R. China, in 1953. He received his B.S. degree in chemistry from Fujian Normal University in 1982 and then remained as a lecturer for five years. In 1988, he went to Tokyo University, Japan, obtaining his Ph.D. degree with Prof. Akira Fujishima in 1993. In 1995, he became an associate professor in the Institute of Photographic Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), and was promoted to full professor in 1996. In 1999 he joined the Institute of Chemistry, CAS, as a professor and deputy director. He is currently serving as a permanent member and general secretary of the Chinese Chemical Society (CCS) and is the vice president of the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC). His research interests are focused on low-dimensional organic/inorganic optofunctional materials and he is the author of 270 articles.

NJC’s staff and Boards wish a warm welcome to Prof. Yao and look forward to a fruitful collaboration.

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