Archive for the ‘News’ Category

New faces in the Montpellier editorial office

This summer has seen the arrival of three new members on the NJC editorial team:
• Eva Balentova (Deputy Editor)
• Cynthia Challencin (Publishing Assistant)
• Ling Peng (Assistant Editor)
Read short profiles of each below, and more details on the NJC CNRS website.


Dr Eva Balentova was recently recruited as the Deputy Editor of NJC, replacing Dr Marie Cote (now with RSC Publishing in Cambridge).

Eva carried out her Ph.D. research in organic chemistry at the University of Pavol Jozef Šafárik in Košice, a city in eastern Slovakia. These studies involved long-term stays at both Turku University (Finland) and Universidad del País Vasco (EHU) in Spain. Postdoctoral positions at EHU and in France (Nancy and Montpellier) followed.

Eva’s research background in organic and natural product synthesis, as well as medicinal, peptide and carbohydrate chemistry, will beautifully complement the scientific expertise already covered by the other NJC editors.


(more…)

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NJC Issue 9 now online!

NJC Issue 9, now published online, covers trends and progress in the areas of supramolecular chemistry, organometallic chemistry, catalysis, nanostructures, material sciences, and much more. This issue also includes a preview of RSC events in 2011/2012.

The outside front cover highlights the article by Lirong Lin (Xiamen University) and Hui Zhang (Zhejiang University) who present a characterization study of stereochemically labile atropisomers by solid-state circular dichroism and UV-Vis spectra.

Concentration effects in solid-state CD spectra of chiral atropisomeric compounds by Lei Ding, Lirong Lin, Chengyong Liu, Hongkun Li, Anjun Qin, Yan Liu, Ling Song, Hui Zhang, Ben Zhong Tang and Yufen Zhao, New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1781-1786; DOI:10.1039/C1NJ20185A

The inside front cover features work by Mireille Blanchard-Desce and Olivier Mongin from the University of Rennes on design and synthesis of dual-role biphotonic chromophores. The ability to preserve their fluorescence property makes novel banana-shaped fluorophores very attractive molecules for photodynamic therapy (TPA). Furthermore, possible encapsulating of these biphonic fluorophores within nanoparticles is now of high interest.

Banana-shaped biphotonic quadrupolar chromophores: from fluorophores to biphotonic photosensitizers by Cédric Rouxel, Marina Charlot, Youssef Mir, Céline Frochot, Olivier Mongin and Mireille Blanchard-Desce, New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1771-1780, DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20073A

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

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NJC at end-of-summer conferences

Chemistry in the life sciences, nitrogen ligands everywhere, and catalysis are the themes of three conferences where NJC staff and board members will be representing the journal:

4th European Conference on Chemistry for Life Sciences (August 31 – September 3, 2011 in Budapest, Hungary)
5th EuCheMS Conference on Nitrogen Ligands in Coordination Chemistry, Metal-organic Chemistry, Bioinorganic Chemistry, Materials & Catalysis (September 4 – 8, 2011 in Granada, Spain)
21st Century Catalysis Science and Applications (September 29 – 30, 2011 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada)


Kicking off this final round of summer conferences, Assistant Editor Dr Laurent Vial will be in Budapest for the 4th European Conference on Chemistry for Life Sciences. As part of the sponsorship of this conference by NJC, he will present poster prizes to two young chemists*. (Contact Laurent if you would like to meet him in Budapest.)

The conference covers both bioorganic and bioinorganic chemistry with an interdisciplinary flavor. The scientific sessions will cover a wide range of topics, including biomolecules in 3D, metals in medicine, synthetic biology, bioinspired catalysis, glycochemistry and many more.

This 4th edition in the series of meetings is co-chaired by Tamás Kiss and András Perczel and will be held in the ELTE Convention Center located at Eötvös Loránd University.

Following close behind is the 5th EuCheMS Conference on Nitrogen Ligands, at which NJC is sponsoring a poster prize*. Associate Editor Prof. Mike Scott and NJC Managing Editor Dr Denise Parent will be attending and look forward to meeting you there. Drop us a line if you will also be in Granada.

Ten eminent scientists from throughout the world will present plenary lectures on nitrogen-containing ligands used in a variety of areas, including biology, medicine, energy and the environment, materials….and almost 50 other speakers will expand on the subject.

This European Association for Chemical and Molecular Sciences conference will take place in the Granada Congress Centre and is organized by Jorge A. R. Navarro with colleagues from Spain, Italy and Germany.


At the end of September the 21st Century Catalysis Science and Applications colloquium of the Entretiens Jacques Cartier will take place in Ottawa. NJC Board member Dr Odile Eisenstein, one of the speakers, will present an NJC poster prize*. (Contact Odile.)

Conference topics range from a fundamental understanding of catalysis, biocatalysis and biomass conversion, to applications in nanoscience and energy.

This two-day conference is organized by researchers in Canada and France, and in particular Professors Tom Baker, Nicolas Abatzoglou and Davit Zargarian locally.
(more…)

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NJC article featured in ACS Noteworthy Chemistry

ACS Noteworthy Chemistry, in its August 15th edition, has highlighted an NJC article in a post entitled “Use cobalt(II) thiocyanate with TLC to identify cocaine” among the weekly selected publications presenting the most innovative ideas.

In this NJC article, O. Siri and co-workers from the University of Marseille (France) have designed a novel method for cocaine detection using cobalt thiocyanate reagent impregnated directly on TLC plates. This new strategy is rapid, low cost and offers perspectives for future use as a new field test kit for the identification of illicit substances.

Cobalt thiocyanate reagent revisited for cocaine identification on TLC
Rose Haddoub, Daniel Ferry, Philippe Marsal and Olivier Siri,
New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1351-1354.; to read the original paper (if a subscriber)

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August 2011 issue of NJC now published!

We invite you to read the latest issue of NJC. The 21 original research papers cover a wide variety of topics, amongst them: click chemistry applied to polymers, activation of fluorophores, correlation of weak bonding and antioxidant/anticancer activity, bimetallic nanoparticles on MWCNT with high catalytic activity, AIE-based fluorescent metal ion probes, energetic ionic liquids, hapticity in sandwich compounds, catenated macrocycles, and much more.

The outside front cover illustrates the hydration of metal ions, studied in the gas phase by tandem mass spectrometry, and which can provide insights into chemical behavior in solution. The group of Scott McIndoe (University of Victoria, Canada) has found a strong correlation between solution acidity of lanthanide ions and the degree of hydration at which charge reduction occurs.

Blurring the line between solution and the gas phase: collision-induced dissociation of hypersolvated lanthanide trications provides insights into solution acidity
Jennifer Pape, Keri McQuinn, Fraser Hof and J. Scott McIndoe
New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1582–1587
DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20105K


A polymer fiber functionalized with a phthalocyanine complex (inside front cover) shows promise as a material for self-disinfecting wound dressing. Tebello Nyokong and her coworkers at Rhodes University (South Africa) show that the lutetium complex incorporated into the fiber maintains its photoactivity and produces the very reactive singlet oxygen species.

Photophysical and photochemical behavior of electrospun fibers of a polyurethane polymer chemically linked to lutetium carboxyphenoxy phthalocyanine
Ruphino Zugle, Christian Litwinski, Nelson Torto and Tebello Nyokong
New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1588–1595
DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20126C

To be informed when the next issue appears, sign up for NJC’s FREE table-of-contents email alert.

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NJC poster prize winner at the 19th ISPPCC

Many congratulations to Johannes H. Klein of Würzburg University in Germany who was the NJC poster prize winner at the 19th International Symposium on the Photophysics and Photochemistry of Coordination Compounds held in Strasbourg last week.

Poster prize winner Johannes H. Klein (left) receiving his award from Marie Cote (right), deputy editor, NJC

Johannes, who works in Prof. Christoph Lambert’s group, won for his poster entitled “Photoinduced Charge Transfer Properties of Donor and Acceptor Substituted Iridium(III)-Complexes”. He was presented with a glossy certificate, and receives a one-year subscription to the journal. Why not find out more about Johannes’s research by visiting the Lambert Group homepage.

The meeting brought together over 250 participants from all over the world, featured 16 plenary and invited lectures by internationally distinguished scientists, and over 40 contributed talks, covering the most recent developments on topics including:

  • Photophysics
  • Light emitting molecular materials
  • Biosystems
  • Light driven systems for energy purposes
  • Coordination photochemistry



  • Many congratulations again from the NJC editorial office to Johannes on his award, and to the organizers of this conference for making it another great event for the photochemistry and photophysics community.

    Why not submit your next article to NJC today!

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    NJC Issue 7 out now !

    We invite you to visit the July issue of NJC.

    An article by Helen C. Hailes (University College London, UK) features on this month’s front cover. In this publication, supramolecular polymers have been generated from dimeric ureidocytosine modules that self-assemble into oligomeric quadruple hydrogen bonded (DDAA) arrays.

    Quadruple hydrogen bonded cytosine modules: N-1 functionalised arrays, Valerie G. H. Lafitte, Abil E. Aliev, Elisabetta Greco, Kason Bala, Peter Golding and Helen C. Hailes, New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1522-1527, DOI:  10.1039/c1nj20162j (Article)

    The inside cover was produced by Olivier Siri and co-workers (University of Marseille, France), presenting a rapid, simple and low-cost test for the visual identification of cocaine on TLC without interferes with cutting substances.

    Cobalt thiocyanate reagent revisited for cocaine identification on TLC, Rose Haddoub, Daniel Ferry, Philippe Marsal and Olivier Siri, New J. Chem.2011, 35, 1351-1354, DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20234K (Letter)

    You can access and read the whole issue 7 here.

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    Meet Our Authors – July 2011

    We are pleased to present a selection of our authors from this July issue of NJC, who have kindly taken some time outside their research to answer a few questions for us…

    Our first author is Richard G. Compton, Professor of Chemistry and Aldrichian Praelector at Oxford University (UK), whose research interests focus on Electrochemistry, Electroanalysis, Room Temperature Ionic Liquids and Nanoelectrochemistry. In their paper, Richard and his team report on the deposition of palladium nanoparticles onto carbon nanotubes and the use of the resulting high area nanocomposite as an electrode material for hydrogenolysis reactions. Such reactions are carried out without the need for hydrogen gas – rather the active hydrogen is electrolytically loaded into the palladium nanoparticles from bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide dissolved in a room temperature ionic liquid solvent. Thus, explains Richard, the method is highly convenient and represents an excellent example of the synergic use of nanoelectrochemistry and of ionic liquids to create an electrosynthetic route to replace a traditional chemical method.

    Palladium nanoparticle-modified carbon nanotubes for electrochemical hydrogenolysis in ionic liquids
    Yao Meng, Leigh Aldous, Ben S. Pilgrim, Timothy J. Donohoe and Richard G. Compton
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1369-1375, DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20070D

    On choosing NJC to publish this work, Richard comments that “we have always found NJC to provide an excellent service, most especially in terms of the quality and constructive nature of the referees reports. In addition the speed and professionalism of all our interactions with the journal have been invariably excellent.”

    Ouside the lab, Richard and his group visit the Lamb and Flag pub in St Giles, Oxford to socialise, reflect and drink lager. “In fact the pub is owned (and run as a freehouse) by St John’s College where I teach and all profits are recycled in the form of graduate studentships. So our drinking actually contributes to those who will undertake research in the future!” he explains.


    Our next author is Dr. Kumaresh Ghosh, Associate Professor of Chemistry at the University of Kalyani, India, whose research thematics cover molecular recognition and supramolecular chemistry, with a special emphasis on the design of chemosensors for neutral, cationic and anionic substrates. In their NJC article, Kumaresh and his coworkers intended to use simple molecules with hydrogen bonding information in designing chemosensors for anions of biological significance. They have used ortho- phenylenediamine in the design of a simple molecular sensor that is able to effectively sense and recognize fluorometrically phosphate group containing anionic substrates involving hydrogen bonds and pi-pi interactions in a cooperative fashion. “Stimulus came from our previous effort in the same direction using benzimidazolium motif”, comments Kumaresh. The authors chose NJC as ‘it is a journal of high impact and provides a shared platform where scientists of different areas can express their research views.”

    A new ortho-phenylenediamine-based cleft for selective sensing of H2PO4- and ATP
    Kumaresh Ghosh and Indrajit Saha
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1397-1402
    DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20116F

    When asked of an alternative career path if not a scientist, Kumaresh wonders: “This is a difficult question. I like organic chemistry very much. I always enjoy designing molecules of special interest. Obviously, if I could not be a scientist, I would try to do something creative.”

    Now we meet Dr. Jean-Marc Escudier, CNRS researcher at the Université Paul Sabatier in Toulouse, France, whose research interests focus on Nucleic Acids Chemistry. Jean-Marc and his team aim at exploring new fields in nucleic acid chemistry, and of particular interest, the control of the shape and structure of the sugar/phosphate backbone, its impact on secondary structure formation ability and finally the possible modulation of protein/nucleic acids complex formation. This prompted their article published this month in NJC:

    α,β-D-CNA featuring canonical and noncanonical α/β torsional angles behaviours within oligonucleotides
    Arnaud Boissonnet, Christelle Dupouy, Pierre Millard, Marie-Pierre Durrieu, Nathalie Tarrat and Jean-Marc Escudier
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1528-1533
    DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20086K

    On choosing the journal, Jean-Marc commented that NJC deserves the attention of the CNRS researchers (Editor’s note: NJC is owned by the CNRS and published monthly by the RSC) and moreover ‘it very recently published a themed issue on our topic of interest’*, he says.

    Outside the lab, Jean-Marc enjoys free-riding on his mountain bike, on single downhill tracks, and would have liked to become an artist, especially a musician, if not a scientist.

    Closing this month’s selection, we are pleased to present Dr. Giacomo Saielli, Researcher at the CNR Institute on Membrane Technology, in Padova, Italy. Giacomo’s research focuses on Ionic Liquid Crystals and computational NMR. In the recent years, Giacommo and his coworkers have been interested in viologen salts because of their many important properties both as materials (e.g. they form ionic liquid crystal phases) as well as for their molecular properties in solution, particularly anions recognition. As a step further, they wondered
    whether the easy modulation of the oxidation state could be used for the recognition of neutral species as well, such as fullerenes. As shown in their NJC article, the results of the theoretical investigation strongly support this hypothesis.

    DFT study of the interaction free energy of π–π complexes of fullerenes with buckybowls and viologen dimers
    Girolamo Casella and Giacomo Saielli
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1453-1459, DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20117D

    “We appreciate RSC journals and we were looking for a general chemistry forum: NJC appeared as the natural choice”, says Giacommo. In his spare time, Giacommo enjoys reading and would appreciate life as a farmer somewhere in beautiful Tuscany, if not a scientist!
    We warmly thank our July authors for sharing their views and chemistry with us!

    If you have had a recent NJC publication and are interested in featuring in our ‘meet our authors’ entries, then please get in touch with us at the NJC Editorial Office.

    *NJC recently published a themed-issue on Biophosphates, guest-edited by Barbara Nawrot and Jean-Pierre Majoral, covering amongst others the chemical synthesis and mechanistic studies of nucleotides and oligo- nucleotides, inhibitors of enzymes associated with cancer and gene expression inhibitors, models for structural studies, nucleic acid analogs as tools for the investigation of metabolic processes and potential therapeutics…. Why not have a look now it now: NJC 2010 Issue 5

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    Top Ten most accessed NJC articles in May

    This month sees the following articles in NJC that are in the top ten most accessed, including a Focus and three Perspective articles:

    Preparation of graphene-TiO2 composites with enhanced photocatalytic activity
    Kangfu Zhou, Yihua Zhu, Xiaoling Yang, Xin Jiang and Chunzhong Li
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 353-359, DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00623H, Paper

    MOFs, MILs and more: concepts, properties and applications for porous coordination networks (PCNs)
    Christoph Janiak and Jana K. Vieth
    New J. Chem., 2010, 34, 2366-2388, DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00275E , Perspective

    Organic composite nanomaterials: energy transfers and tunable luminescent behaviors
    Chuang Zhang, Yong Sheng Zhao and Jiannian Yao
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 973-978, DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20012G, Focus

    Synthesis of [2]-, [3]-, and [4]rotaxanes whose axis contains two bidentate and two tridentate chelates
    Jean-Paul Collin, Stéphanie Durot, Jean-Pierre Sauvage and Yann Trolez
    New J. Chem., 2011, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20213H, Letter

    Facile synthesis and morphology evolution of magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles in different polyol processes
    Changming Cheng, Fangjie Xu and Hongchen Gu
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1072-1079, DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00986E, Paper

    A novel reaction-based, chromogenic and turn-on fluorescent chemodosimeter for fluoride detection
    Clément Padié and Kirsten Zeitler
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 994-997, DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00937G, Letter

    Synthesis of nearly monodispersed metal oxide nanoparticles in water
    Sandip Kumar Pahari, Narottom Sutradhar, Apurba Sinhamahapatra, Provas Pal and Asit Baran Panda
    New J. Chem., 2011, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20221A, Paper

    Microfluidic devices as tools for mimicking the in vivo environment
    Karina Ziółkowska, Radosław Kwapiszewski and Zbigniew Brzózka
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 979-990, DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00709A, Perspective

    An easy access to styrenes: trans aryl 1,3-, 1,4- and 1,5-dienes, and 1,3,5-trienes by Hiyama cross-coupling catalyzed by palladium nanoparticles
    Tanmay Chatterjee, Raju Dey and Brindaban C. Ranu,
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1103-1110, DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ01019G , Paper

    Designing light harvesting antennas by luminescent dendrimers
    Vincenzo Balzani, Giacomo Bergamini, Paola Ceroni and Enrico Marchi
    New J. Chem., 2011, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20142E, Perspective

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    Meet Our Authors – June 2011

    This month we talk with a few authors from the Molecular Materials themed issue. Below, you can meet my selection of 5 authors from this issue. Many thanks to them for agreeing to play the game of “who are you?”!
    An excellent BODIPY dye containing a benzo[2,1,3]thiadiazole bridge as a highly selective colorimetric and fluorescent probe for Hg2+ with naked-eye detection
    Hui-Bin Sun, Shu-Juan Liu, Ting-Chun Ma, Nan-Nan Song, Qiang Zhao and Wei Huang
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1194-1197; DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00850H


    Our first profile is of Professor Wei Huang, who is Deputy President of Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications (P. R. China) and director general of the Key Laboratory for Organic Electronics & Information Displays. His research covers organic and plastic electronics, chemo- and biosensors, information materials and devices, nano materials and technology, bioelectronics.

    In his NJC paper, Wei and colleagues propose a new probe to monitor mercury ions, an important polluant, using optical and electrochemical signaling to achieve high selectivity and sensitivity.

    Wei notes: “We have been interested in the field of chemo and biosensors for many years and have published many research papers in this field. We wish to develop a series of excellent optical probes for cations, anions, and biomolecules, etc. The research idea of this work was stimulated and formed by our previous work. We chose mercury as the target analyte because of its high toxicity and BODIPY dye as probe because of its excellent photophysical properties.”

    When asked what you wanted to be when he was young, Wei replied: “I was dreaming of being a scientist who may create some wonderful high-tech products for mankind. It would be very difficult for me to think of my not being a chemist since I am very fond of chemistry.”

    .
    A monolayer of a Cu2+-tetraazamacrocyclic complex on glass as the adhesive layer for silver nanoparticles grafting, in the preparation of surface-active antibacterial materials
    Piersandro Pallavicini, Giacomo Dacarro, Lucia Cucca, Frank Denat, Pietro Grisoli, Maddalena Patrini, Nicolas Sok and Angelo Taglietti
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1198-1201; DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00829J

    Piersandro Pallavicini is Associate Professor in the Chemistry Department of the University of Pavia (Italy). His research interests center on the synthesis of inorganic nano-objects, modification of inorganic surfaces, coordination chemistry and sensing in micellar nanocontainers.

    Piersandro remarks that “classical coordination chemistry is rarely carried out on surfaces. Despite this, I believe that all the enormously developed coordination chemistry in solution, particularly in the macrocyclic ligands area, could bring brilliant and precious features to the chemistry of self-assembled monolayers on bulk surfaces. Our paper is just one suggestion of what can be done.”

    This project came into being thanks to the collaboration of the Pavia group with that of Frank Denat at the Université de Bourgogne, in Dijon (France).

    “The Dijon team has developed an arsenal of brilliant strategies for the synthesis of polyaza macrocyclic ligands, and we were working together since some years on functional tetraaza macrocycles for the assembly of molecular devices in micellar containers. In the meantime we had started working on the modification of surfaces to impart them antibacterial properties by means of the release of inorganic cations. The idea of preparing a surface with a SAM capable of bearing (and eventually releasing) two antibacterial cations, Cu2+ and Ag+, led us to this project.”

    Piersandro is another chemist with an early vocation: “I was resolutely oriented towards chemistry since when I was a child. As a 9 years old boy I monopolized an entire room in our house, that became my laboratory and that I stuffed with all the Chemistry Sets available on the toys market. I love to be a chemist.”

    .

    [K2Mn5{Mo(CN)7}3]: an open framework magnet with four Tc conversions orchestrated by guests and thermal history
    Julie Milon, Philippe Guionneau, Carine Duhayon and Jean-Pascal Sutter
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1211-1218; DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00860E


    Our next author is Jean-Pascal Sutter, a CNRS research director in the Coordination Chemistry Laboratory located in Toulouse (France). He works on material-directed coordination and supramolecular chemistry, more specifically on molecular magnets and open-framework materials.

    In commenting on his NJC paper, Jean-Pascal says: “It is often considered that porous frameworks and exchange-based magnetism are antagonist properties in terms of performances; the reported magnet demonstrates that a porous framework can be achieved with good magnetic performances. Modest porosity (28%) is sufficient to observe fast and efficient sorption processes by the framework that permit converting the attributes of the corresponding magnets.”

    Jean-Pascal continues that this research project came about “as often in research, by serendipity! The idea to adapt the structural features to favor labile ligand exchange formed back in 2003, when we observed that the loss of a ligand by a metal ion did significantly increase the ordering temperature of a magnet.”

    If he couldn’t be a chemist, Jean-Pascal replied: “Difficult question; most certainly something where creativity is also important.” He sounds hesitant to even envisage the possibility of not being a chemist!

    .

    Controlled growth of core@shell heterostructures based on Prussian blue analogues
    M. Presle, J. Lemainque, J.-M. Guigner, E. Larquet, I. Maurin, J.-P. Boilot and T. Gacoin
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1296-1301; DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00857E

    Isabelle Maurin is also a CNRS research scientist, working at the Laboratoire de Physique de la Matière Condensée at the Ecole Polytechnique in Palaiseau (France).

    Isabelle has been working in the field of photo-induced phase transitions in molecular solids since 2003. “Together with a better understanding of the local and macroscopic structural changes associated to these transitions, I have been trying since 2009 to extend the concept of molecular photomagnetism to multiferroic-like heterostructures based on the combination of photostrictive and piezomagnetic compounds. The first key issue was the control of the chemical composition in the heterostructure, which is is the object of the paper published in NJC.”

    Before choosing chemistry, Isabelle considered become “an archeologist to combine travels in territories with high cultural inheritance (Egypt, Persia …), history and research.”

    .

    Electrochromic devices and thin film transistors from a new family of ethylenedioxythiophene based conjugated polymers
    Zhongtao Li, Yuan Zhang, Amanda L. Holt, Borys P. Kolasa, Justin G. Wehner, Andreas Hampp, Guillermo C. Bazan, Thuc-Quyen Nguyen and Daniel E. Morse
    New J. Chem., 2011, 35, 1327-1334; DOI: 10.1039/C0NJ00837K


    Our last profile is of Professor Daniel Morse, who is currently Emeritus Founding Director of the UCSB-MIT-Caltech Institute for Collaboratoive Biotechnologies, as well as Wilcox Professor of Biomolecular Science and Engineering at UCSB (University of California Santa Barbara, USA). His research theme is bio-inspired routes to materials with advanced functionalities.

    In their NJC paper, Dan and his colleagues synthesized a new family of electrochromic polymers that show switchable absorption in the infrared in the absence of water. “These offer promise for electrically activated solid-state shutters and filters in the IR, since their high charge transfer mobility and ion injection efficiency permits relatively rapid switching and good switchable contrast, while their robustness and longevity exceed those of aqueous devices.”

    This work had its inspiration in nature, as Dan recounts it: “We recently discovered the molecular mechanisms governing the dynamic, tunable changes in color and reflectance that squids and octopi use to change their color and reflectance for camouflage and communication. Our colleagues at Raytheon Vision Systems, Inc., approached us to ask if we might be able to translate these mechanisms to an electrically switchable, synthetic polymer-based filter and shutter for cameras operating in the infrared. This gave rise to the productive and close collaboration that produced the materials and devices described in our paper.”

    Apparently this approach is a long-ingrained one for Dan: “I was always fascinated by the natural world, both organic and inorganic, and the mechanisms that make it tick.”
    I hope you’ve enjoyed reading this and getting to know some of your fellow chemists a little better. I’m struck how most of them were bitten by the chemistry bug at a very early age. What about you?

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