Meet Our Authors – January 2014

Four of the authors whose work appears in the first issue of New Journal of Chemistry for 2014 tell us about their work and what they hope to achieve in 2014

By Andre Cobb, NJC Advisory Board member

In an excellent review on the chemistry and applications of nanodiamonds (diamondoids), our first authors—Professors Peter Schreiner of the Justus-Liebig University, and Jean-Cyrille Hierso of the Institut Universitaire de France—explain how these fascinating structures are the next generation sp3-carbon materials supplied by nature (in gas and petroleum). These long overlooked “carbon gems” close the gap to the popular sp2-materials such as carbon nanotubes, fullerenes, and graphenes that have complementary properties.

Prof. Peter Schreiner playing tennis

Peter’s goals for 2014 are to establish two recently introduced concepts more firmly. The first is the tunneling control of chemical reactions, where he has shown in a series of papers that tunneling can override kinetic and thermodynamic considerations, and should therefore be considered as the third paradigm to rationalize chemical reactivity. His second goal is to decipher the role of London dispersion interactions for chemical structures and in chemical reactivity. At a personal level, he would like to become a better tennis player, although he believes he has already begun struggling with typical age limitations!

Prof. Jean-Cyrille Hierso

 

 

For his part, Jean-Cyrille plans to continue to promote science and to continue contributing to the “blossoming” of his co-workers.

Diamondoids: functionalization and subsequent applications of perfectly defined molecular cage hydrocarbons by Maria A. Gunawan, Jean-Cyrille Hierso,* Didier Poinsot, Andrey A. Fokin, Natalie A. Fokina, Boryslav A. Tkachenko and Peter R. Schreiner, New J. Chem., 2014, 38, 28-41. DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00535F (Perspective)

Prof. Masanari Kimura

 

  

 

Professor Masanari Kimura of the Nagasaki University in Japan is interested in the development of new reactions based on transition metals and heterocyclic chemistry, as is demonstrated by his January contribution on the formation of C—C bonds using allylzinc species and carbonyls.

Masanari says his inspiration for this work comes of course from Philippe Antoine Barbier and François Auguste Victor Grignard.

A major goal for Professor Kimura in 2014 is the development of novel and efficient organic syntheses of useful compounds from carbon dioxide.

C–C bond formation via 1,2-addition of a tert-butylzinc reagent and carbonyls across conjugated dienes by Yuki Ohira, Maya Hayashi, Takamichi Mori, Gen Onodera and Masanari Kimura, New J. Chem., 2014, 38, 330-337. DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00992K (Paper)

 

Prof. Katarzyna OstrowskaProfessor Katarzyna Ostrowska of Jagiellonian University in Poland and co-workers have published an investigation on the design and sensing abilities of a range of integrated azaheteroarene fluorophores designed to recognize a variety of different ions. Katarzyna says that, “As an organic chemist, I was fascinated to see how the minor modifications of structure affect the fluorescence emission and recognition of zinc and indium metal ions.”

As for goals for the coming year, Professor Ostrowska comments, “In a recent publication I described the two different mechanisms of ligand binding to zinc and indium ions. In 2014 I hope to find out why these receptors selectively recognize zinc and how resonance effects can influence the quantum yields of different substituted fluorophores”.

Ratiometric fluorescent Zn2+ and In3+ receptors of fused pyrazine with an aminopropanol chain in acetonitrile by Katarzyna Ostrowska,* Alicja Kaźmierska, Maria Rąpała-Kozik and Justyna Kalinowska-Tłuścik, New J. Chem., 2014, 38, 213-226. DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00750B (Paper)

Many thanks to all our authors who contributed photos and comments for this article.

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Fluorescent carbon dots from office waste printer paper

Professor Boxue Feng and his co-workers from Lanzhou University in China present a creative idea for the recycling of waste paper.

In their NJC Letter, they report a simple synthesis of water-soluble, fluorescent carbon dots (CDs) from waste paper as the carbon source via hydrothermal process at 180°C. They showed that the as-prepared CDs exhibit strong luminescence properties, good photostability, high photoluminescence quantum yield and fairly low toxicity. The green method described in this study indicates the potential applications of such prepared CDs in the field of bio-imaging.

Read the article now:
Simple one-step synthesis of water-soluble fluorescent carbon dots from waste paper

By Jumeng Wei, Xin Zhang, Yingzhuo Sheng, Jianmin Shen, Peng Huang, Shikuan Guo, Jiaqi Pan, Bitao Liu and Boxue Feng ; New J. Chem., 2014, Advance Article; DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ01325A, Letter

Interested in reading further? Why not download the full article now, FREE to access for a period of 4 weeks!

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Hot articles for January

Here are the latest Hot Articles published in NJC, recommended by referees. All are free to access for next 4 weeks!

Using gel morphology to control pore shape by Jonathan A. Foster, David W. Johnson, Mark-Oliver M. Pipenbrock and Jonathan W. Steed ; New J. Chem., 2014. DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ01295F, Paper

Alkyl substituent effects in photochemical and thermal reactions of photochromic thiophene-S,S-dioxidized diarylethenes by Hiroaki Shoji, Daichi Kitagawa and Seiya Kobatake; New J. Chem., 2014; DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ01246H

Enhancement of hydroxyl radical generation of a solid state photo-Fenton reagent based on magnetite/carboxylate-rich carbon composites by embedding carbon nanotubes as electron transfer channels by Tingting Han, Lingling Qu, Zhijun Luo, Xiangyang Wu and Daoxiao Zhang ; New J. Chem., 2014; DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00959A

Synthesis and optoelectronic properties of phenylenevinylenequinoline macromolecules by Reyes Flores-Noria, Rosa Vázquez, Eduardo Arias, Ivana Moggio, Marlene Rodríguez, Ronald F. Ziolo, Oliverio Rodríguez, Dean R. Evans and Carl Liebig; New J. Chem., 2014; DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ01193C

Recoverable Cu/SiO2 composite-catalysed click synthesis of 1,2,3-triazoles in water media by Cátia Schwartz Radatz, Liliana do Amaral Soares, Estéfano Roberto Vieira, Diego Alves, Dennis Russowsky and Paulo Henrique Schneider; New J. Chem., 2014; DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ01167D

Arsinous acid as a thiol binding group: potential cysteine peptide tagging functionality that binds a single thiol by Xiaofei Liang and Dale G. Drueckhammer; New J. Chem., 2014; DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ01462B

PEDOT nanostructures synthesized in hexagonal mesophases by Srabanti Ghosh, Hynd Remita, Laurence Ramos, Alexandre Dazzi, Ariane Deniset-Besseau, Patricia Beaunier, Fabrice Goubard, Pierre-Henri Aubert, Francois Brisset and Samy Remita; New J. Chem., 2014; DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ01349A

Calcination-influenced interfacial structures and gas-sensing properties of multi-walled carbon nanotube–tin oxide p–n heterojunctions by Yong Jia, Pei-Yun Wu, Yin-Ping Jiang, Qun-Ying Zhang, Shuang-Sheng Zhou, Fang Fang and Dai-Yin Peng; New J. Chem., 2014; DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ01280H

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NJC call-for-papers: Suprabio themed issue

NJC invites contributions to a themed issue on supramolecular systems involved bio/bioinspired molecules.

Bioinspired systems in supramolecular chemistry and nanotechnology

Supramolecular systems involving bio and/or bioinspired molecules offer an alternative route for the fabrication of nano-objects. Recent advances in such systems should lead to progress in molecular sensing, controlled release, signaling, etc., and to new developments in numerous fields ranging from soft materials to medicinal chemistry. A good number of supramolecular assemblies featuring natural and/or synthetic molecules are now available.

This themed issue will focus on all aspects regarding the description of new approaches and methodologies, which can usefully be applied to the exploration of bio and/or bioinspired supramolecular systems. Research papers and reviews dealing with the presented fields are welcome for the preparation of this themed issue of the New Journal of Chemistry.

Scope
Biomolecules and their synthetic analogues forming supramolecular systems. Recent progress in the area of bio-inspired materials and/or colloids based on biomolecules and/or bio-inspired derivatives such as nucleosides, nucleotides, oligonucleotides, aminoacids, peptides, lipids, sugars, etc. Smart self-assemblies, nanosystems, biosensors, bioimaging tools, etc.

Guest Editors
Professor Mark Grinstaff (Boston University, USA)
Dr Michel Camplo (University Aix-Marseille, France)
Dr Jean-Manuel Raimundo (University Aix-Marseille, France)
Professor Philippe Barthélémy (INSERM, University of Bordeaux, France)

How to submit and deadline
Contributions to this themed issue are to be made through the NJC manuscript submission website.
• Please clearly indicate in the comments to editor that the contribution is intended for the “Suprabio” themed issue.
• Please  select the correct format for your contribution. These are defined in the table below. More details are given in the January 2014 editorial.
• All contributions will undergo the usual evaluation process.
Download the January 2014 editorial for more information.

The deadline to submit is May 7, 2014.
Contributions received after this date will be considered but inclusion of late papers in the themed issue is not guaranteed.


For further information:
Read NJC
More news

Submit to NJC

Contact us: NJC “at” univ-montp2.fr

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Announcing the 2014 NJC Symposia in Sweden

NJC Editorial Board members will be in Stockholm and Lund on May 21 and 23 for the 3rd series of NJC Symposia: New Directions in Chemistry.

2014 NJC Symposia: New Directions in Chemistry

Following on 2012’s NJC Symposia in 3 Chinese cities, NJC editorial board members and editors will be travelling to Sweden for two 2014 NJC Symposia: New Directions in Chemistry. Each one-day symposium will feature presentations by NJC editorial board members and invited guest speakers.


Please join us and meet... 
Members of the NJC Editorial Board who will be participating in the 2014 NJC Symposia are:
Co-Editor-in-Chief Professor Mir Wais HOSSEINI (University of Strasbourg, France)
Associate Editor Professor Jaïrton DUPONT (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil)
Associate Editor Professor Peter JUNK (James Cook University, Australia)
Professor Len BARBOUR (University of Stellenbosch, South Africa)
Professor Debbie CRANS (Colorado State University, USA)
Professor Odile EISENSTEIN (CNRS, Montpellier, France)
Professor Christina MOBERG (KTH, Stockholm, Sweden)
Professor Sijbren OTTO (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
Professor Dai-Wen PANG (Wuhan University, China)
NJC Managing Editor Dr Denise PARENT (CNRS, Montpellier, France) will also be present.

Dates:
May 21 at the KTH in Stockholm (Host: Professor Christina MOBERG)
May 23 at Lund University (Host: Professor Ola WENDT)
Full details and the scientific programs will be available soon. Please check this blog in the coming weeks.
These symposia are free and open to all interested persons.
We all look forward to meeting you in Stockholm or Lund in May!
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NJC Issue 1 out now

We welcome you to NJC’s first issue of 2014. The new year gets off to a good start with the publication of high-quality, original and significant research works that display nanomaterials, ab initio calculations, biocatalysts, soft materials and much more.

The outside front cover highlights a Focus article from Riccardo Marega and Davide Bonifazi (University of Namur, Brussels, and University of Trieste, Italy) that was aimed at presenting the most significant examples in which carbon nanotubes, hosting suitable molecular species in their hollow cavity, are used for bioimaging and drug delivery applications.

“Filling carbon nanotubes for nanobiotechnological applications”, Riccardo Marega and Davide Bonifazi, New J. Chem., 2014, 38, 22-2. DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ01008B.

NJC issue 1, 2014 inside front cover was produced by Jean-Cyrille Hierso (Université de Bourgogne, France), Peter R. Schreiner (Justus-Liebig-Universität, Germany), and co-workers. In this Perspective article, the authors provide an overview of the (poly)functionalization of face-fused adamantane cages (i.e., diamondoids) and their applications in fields such as organocatalysis, polymers, molecular electronics and mechanics.

“Diamondoids: functionalization and subsequent applications of perfectly defined molecular cage hydrocarbons”, Maria A. Gunawan, Jean-Cyrille Hierso, Didier Poinsot, Andrey A. Fokin, Natalie A. Fokina, Boryslav A. Tkachenko and Peter R. Schreiner, New J. Chem., 2014, 38, 28-41. DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00535F.

You can access and read the whole issue available online at: NJC 2014, Issue 1. Leave us a comment and let us know what you think!

We wish you a happy new year 2014!

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Meet Our Authors from December 2013

Three of the authors whose work appears in the year’s last issue of New Journal of Chemistry tell us a little bit about themselves and their work.

Dr Santa Chawla of the CSIR - National Physical Laboratory in New DelhiOur first author, Dr Santa Chawla, works at the CSIR National Physical Laboratory in New Delhi (India), where she is Associate Dean of Physical Sciences and also professor of the Academy of Scientific & Innovative Research. Her research centres on the development of phosphor nanoparticles for the enhancement of solar cell efficiency through solar full-spectrum conversion.

With several colleagues, Santa’s paper reports their latest efforts to develop materials for efficient energy harvesting. In this paper, a single phosphor with dual excitation and dual emission properties has been fabricated. Their material also shows plasmonic enhancement of the fluorescence. Such a material with intense red and green emission can be very useful for simultaneous conversion of solar UV and IR to visible radiation.

When not in the lab, Santa enjoys both reading and travelling.

Fabrication of dual excitation dual emission phosphor with plasmonic enhancement of fluorescence for simultaneous conversion of solar UV and IR to visible radiation
by Santa Chawla,   M. Parvaz,   Vineet Kumar and   Zubair Buch,
New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 3991–3997. DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00889D (Paper)

Julia Bayne, student at the University of OttawaJulia Bayne co-authored the Focus review on pigments with Prof. Ian Butler. While participating in the Inorganic Chemistry Exchange Program during the summer of 2013, Julia worked in Ian’s materials science laboratory at McGill University (Montreal, Canada), which specialises in variable-temperature and high-pressure micro-Raman spectroscopy of artists’ pigments. Temperature and pressure-dependent structural changes of artists’ pigments play an instrumental role in art conservation and the determination of forgeries. Additionally, the stability of the pigments noted in their paper reinforces their continued long-term use in artwork.

Julia is currently a 4th year undergraduate student at the University of Ottawa (Canada) in the chemistry honours programme. She is conducting research in an organometallic laboratory, exploring the synthesis and reactivity of transition metal catalysts with respect to perfluoroalkene polymerization.

When not in the lab or immersed in a chemistry textbook, Julia practices yoga or weight-lifting, aiming to improve her “physical” chemistry.

Effect of temperature and pressure on selected artists’ pigments
by Julia M. Bayne and Ian S. Butler,
New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 3833–3839. DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00955F (Focus)

Dr Igor Sivaev of the A.N.Nesmeyanov Institute of Organoelement CompoundsOur last author for this month is Dr Igor Sivaev, who is a senior researcher working in the area of boron chemistry at the A.N.Nesmeyanov Institute of Organoelement Compounds in Moscow (Russia).

Igor’s current research project is the synthesis of functional derivatives of carboranes for incorporation in various bio- and nano- molecules. Igor explains the significance of this work by quoting one of his countrymen:
“Chemistry has widely spread his hands in human affairs” said Mikhail Lomonosov, famous Russian scientist encyclopedist in the middle of the 18th century. Today these words are associated in the best way with the chemistry of polyhedral boron hydrides (boranes, carboranes, metallacarboranes, etc.) that find applications in such different fields as cancer diagnostics and treatment, liquid crystals, nonlinear optic materials, catalysts, molecular machines and many others. Therefore I chose NJC to publish this research work because the journal is addressed to a cross-disciplinary and wide readership.

In his free time (when he has some) Igor reads non-fiction works and enjoys travelling to different places with historical or cultural significance.

Synthesis of new ω-amino- and ω-azidoalkyl carboranes
by Marina Yu. Stogniy, Igor B. Sivaev, Ivan A. Godovikov, Zoya A. Starikova, Vladimir I. Bregadze and Shicheng Qi,
New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 3865–3868. DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00677H (Letter)

A very warm thanks to our three authors who agreed to play the game and reply to a few questions.

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Meet Our Authors – November Issue 2013

by Ling PENG, NJC Assistant Editor

Here is a selection of author profiles from the 2013 November issue of NJC. We thank them most warmly for accepting our invitation and having kindly taken their time to answer a few questions for us.


Our first author is Dr. Jean-Pierre Majoral, who is currently an emerita Research Director of exceptional grade in CNRS. He is interested in all aspects of dendrimer properties and applications from biology to medicinal chemistry, material sciences and catalysis. His contribution to this issue is a concise review which presents not only the “state of the art” concerning the use of dendrimers as tools to tackle different aggressive types of cancers (from colon to brain ) but also to point out what should be (or will be) done using dendrimers to face important remaining challenges encountered by medicinal chemists. “It is difficult for me to imagine a different career than the one I had and currently I have!” says Jean-Pierre with a total satisfaction working as a researcher during all a career.  
Prof. Larry Que is a Regents Professor of Chemistry at University of Minnesota, and focuses mainly on bioinorganic chemistry. In this issue, he contributed a paper entitled “Cyclohexene as a versatile substrate probe for the nature of the high-valent iron-oxo oxidant in bio-inspired nonheme iron-catalyzed oxidations”.  “I love discovering new, unusually reactive compounds and understanding how they work. I also enjoy training young scientists very much” claimed Prof Que.  
Prof. Michio Yamada is an Assistant Professor at Tokyo Gakugei University. He is interested in the chemistry of carbon-rich architectures such as fullerenes, carbon nanotubes, and acetylene scaffolds. Currently, he is pursuing the structure-based design and synthesis of novel molecular receptors to explore the supramolecular chemistry of nanocarbons. In his contribution to this issue, he reported a new method for functionalization of fullerenes using photolabelling reagents. “If I couldn’t be a chemist, I’d be a curator in a museum of natural history. Actually I spent a lot of time in museums with my parents in my childhood and the experience was valuable and unforgettable”, says Prof. Yamada.  
Prof. Clotilde Policar is specialized in bio-inorganic chemistry and cellular inorganic chemistry and working at Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. She contributed an article entitled “An Intrinsically Fluorescent Glycoligand for Direct Imaging of Ligand Trafficking in Artificial and Living Cell Systems” in the October issue of NJC.  For her, the most exciting moment is “when a difficulty vanishes, at any level; from a simple technical problem solved to a deeper understanding of a phenomenon. It can be after a long process or in a short moment of insight. It is always enlightening and produces a deep joy and emotion that is, to me, the quintessence of research.”  

Read November’s issue now.

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Andre Cobb named to NJC Board

A University of Reading chemist is the newest member to the NJC International Advisory Board.

We are delighted to announce the appointment of Dr Andre Cobb to New Journal of Chemistry‘s International Advisory Board.

Alexander John Andre Cobb chemistAndre is an Associate Professor of Organic Chemistry in the School of Pharmacy at the University of Reading. He graduated from King’s College London in 1997 and moved to UCL to conduct his Ph.D. research with Professor Charles Marson on the design of new asymmetric catalytic processes. From there he moved to Cambridge to undertake postdoctoral research, first with Dr Florian Hollfelder in the Biochemistry Department, working on the development of synthetic enzymes, and then with Professor Steve Ley in the Chemistry Department in the areas of medicinal chemistry and asymmetric methodology.

In 2005, Andre moved to a faculty position at the University of Reading where he investigates new methods in the synthesis of biologically relevant molecules—particularly unnatural amino acids. He was awarded a university prize for Best Research Output in 2010, and a Thieme Chemistry Journals award in 2011. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 2012.

As a member of the Editorial Board, Andre is interested in using social media to promote NJC. We welcome Andre and look forward to the first tweet!

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NJC Issue 11 online – in honour of Bernard Meunier

NJC  is delighted to announce that NJC issue 11 is available online.

This month’s issue features 27 contributions dedicated to Bernard Meunier, on the occasion of his official retirement from the CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique) in France.

This collection includes high quality articles on a diverse range of topics, including molecular chemistry, dendrimers, nanostructures, organometallic chemistry and catalysis. The issue was guest edited by Azzedine Bousseksou and Jean-Pierre Majoral (CNRS, Toulouse, France). You can read the Editorial to find out more.

In addition to the 44 Full papers and 9 Letters covering a different area of research, issue 11 contains 1 Focus and 3 Perspectives reviews – these review articles are free to access for 4 weeks.

 

Focus

Nanoparticles of molecule-based conductors
Dominique de Caro, Lydie Valade, Christophe Faulmann, Kane Jacob, Diane Van Dorsselaer, Imane Chtioui, Lionel Salmon, Abdelaziz Sabbar, Souad El Hajjaji, Emile Pérez, Sophie Franceschi and Jordi Fraxedas, DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00555K

Perspectives

Dendrimers as macromolecular tools to tackle from colon to brain tumor types: a concise overview
Serge Mignani and Jean-Pierre Majoral, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 3337;
DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00300K

Positively charged phosphorus dendrimers. An overview of their properties
Anne-Marie Caminade and Jean-Pierre Majoral, DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00583F

Organometallic approach for the synthesis of nanostructures
Catherine Amiens, Bruno Chaudret, Diana Ciuculescu-Pradines, Vincent Collière, Katia Fajerwerg, Pierre Fau, Myrtil Kahn, André Maisonnat, Katerina Soulantica and Karine Philippot, DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00650F

 

We hope that you will find NJC issue 11 fun and thought-provoking!


Go to the issue now…

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