Archive for the ‘Board News’ Category

Nanoscale welcomes new Associate Editor Xiao Cheng Zeng

Photograph of Professor Xiao Cheng ZengNanoscale is delighted to announce that Professor Xiao Cheng Zeng has been appointed as an Associate Editor for the journal. Prof. Zeng is the Ameritas Distinguished University Professor of Chemistry at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, USA. He received his bachelor’s degree in Physics from Peking University in 1984 and his Ph.D. from Ohio State University in 1989. He pursued his postdoctoral research in physical chemistry at the University of Chicago and UCLA from 1989 to 1993.

His research interests include computational and theoretical study of liquids (water in particular), confined fluids, two-phase interfaces, and nanoclusters, as well as nanocatalysts and computer-aided design and study of nanostructured materials.

Read Professor Zeng’s recent articles in Nanoscale:

Investigating structural evolution of thiolate protected gold clusters from the first-principles
Yong Pei and Xiao Cheng Zeng
Nanoscale, 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2NR30685A

Edge-decorated graphene nanoribbons by scandium as hydrogen storage media
Menghao Wu, Yi Gao, Zhenyu Zhang and Xiao Cheng Zeng
Nanoscale
, 2012, 4, 915-920, DOI: 10.1039/C2NR11257D

Mn monolayer modified Rh for syngas-to-ethanol conversion: a first-principles study
Fengyu Li, De-en Jiang, Xiao Cheng Zeng and Zhongfang Chen
Nanoscale
, 2012, 4, 1123-1129, DOI: 10.1039/C1NR11121C

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Interview with co-Editor-in-Chief of Nanoscale Jie Liu

Jie Liu photo

Photography courtesy of Megan Morr at Duke Photography

Co-Editor-in-Chief Jie Liu talks to Nanoscale about who has inspired him on his scientific journey so far and his ambitious plans to see Nanoscale being read across the globe.

Liu is the Jerry G. and Patricia Crawford Hubbard Professor of Chemistry at Duke University, USA and his research interests include carbon nanotubes, nanoelectronics, ZnO nanostructures and microporous carbon.

Professor Liu is now handling papers for Nanoscale. You can submit you high impact research to his Editorial Office.

Who inspired you to become a scientist?

My father. He was a high school chemistry teacher, and when I was really, really young he put the dream of becoming a scientist into my head. When I was young in China he started subscribing to scientific magazines. I started reading these articles and was amazed about what science can do and slowly he managed to sink this idea of becoming a scientist in my head and that just stayed.

How did you get involved in nanoscience?

In China when I was a college student with a chemistry major, I quickly realised that I liked physical chemistry a lot, and colloidal science was an area I got very interested in and choose as the topic of my undergraduate research project and then my Masters degree.

When I came to the US I was very lucky to get the chance to work with Charles Lieber on materials science and surface chemistry and we studied the atomic structure of very tiny domains of 2D crystals. That led me to be very interested in nanoscience.

When I was looking for a postdoc I had a chance to work with [Professor Richard E.] Smalley – before I applied for a position in his lab he came to Northeastern University in Boston to give a talk. I went there to listen to him talking about carbon nanotubes. He was such a good public speaker – the talk was great: very inspiring and interesting. I wrote him a letter: I am really interested in this, can you take me as a postdoc? And he did take me. I went to his lab and really started enjoying carbon nanotube research. I had a very exciting three years of post doc experience in Rick Smalley’s lab.

When I was looking for my own position, I found a Professor job at Duke University and decided to continue in the general field of carbon nanotubes and of course my research interests expanded beyond CNTs over the years– I am really interested in controlling the materials structure and properties at the nanoscale, so over the last 10 years we worked on CNTs, nanowires, nanoparticles, and surface nanolithography using an atomic force microscope. I really enjoy my research.

What do you think will be the next big breakthrough in your field?

In CNTs one direction is more fundamental: being able to control the helicity of the carbon nanotube is the next big thing. We are making progress along that direction, and there is theoretical work that suggests it might be possible but practically it is very difficult. It needs very precise instruments to be able to control the growth environment precisely, but I’m confident that if we have instrumentation much better than what we have now, we should be able to control the helicity of carbon nanotubes. Right now we can almost control the electronic properties of CNTs, we can make CNTs that are over 95% semiconducting – I think that is one of the directions for CNT research.

I really think nanoscience needs to be more influential and push the field forward at a faster pace in energy research – not just for energy capture, energy storage. Nanoscience is uniquely suited to solve all of these existing of these problems. It’s a very crowded field, many people are working in the field but progress is not that fast. I anticipate bigger breakthroughs in this field in the next couple of years, simply because of the amount of funding, the amount of people and the interest in this field. I think something will come up pretty soon.

What achievement are you most proud of?

The work we did that demonstrated that nanotubes can grow to extreme lengths, aligned by the gas flow; that is a milestone in the field. It demonstrated that if there is no external force that is stopping the growth of CNTs, nanotubes can grow really long and really fast. That was unexpected.

The recent work we did to selectively grow enriched semiconducting CNT arrays, I think with more work in this field we can definitely make the aligned CNT array a very good candidate for future electronic devices.

Another field that I’m very proud of but I’m not currently working on is the development of the electrochemical dip-pen nanolithography from my group. I think that opened the door for dip-pen nanolithography to become a more general, more versatile tool. It made people think about the chemistry underneath the AFM tip and enabled people to develop more AFM-based nanolithography technology.

What advice would you give to a young scientist?

I’m old now? <laughs> I learned from Smalley that if you treat science like your job it’s very hard and very time consuming, but if you treat science as a hobby, something you are very interested in, you want to dive in and play with it, you will have a different feeling about the work you are doing and you will fully enjoy it much more.

What are you most looking forward to most about being co-Editor-in-Chief of Nanoscale?

It’s a very unique opportunity. I was not looking to become Editor for a journal, but when Philip contacted me I looked at the opportunity and I thought, that’s a very good journal, it’s a very good opportunity, it’s my way of paying back to society because I’ve fully enjoyed my research experience in the lab for 10-15 years and I’ve published many papers with the help of different Editors. I appreciate their work, so I think I can get into their shoes and be able to help other people and to contribute to the field from a different direction. That’s what attracted me to this position and I think that with my experience in research, I can help the journal to become more successful by promoting great science and be able to contribute to the field at a different level.

What do you think Nanoscale has to offer authors?

I think Nanoscale is more international than journals by other publishers – that is something unique to Nanoscale. Nanoscale reaches a broader audience, the authors are more widely distributed across the whole world. I like the approach of RSC journals having people from different parts of the world contributing to the journal, like the distribution of Editors from the US, Asia and Europe. The Editors are experts in their field – I think that’s another advantage for the journal. Also the relationship with the Royal Society of Chemistry – that makes it very attractive.

What are your aspirations for Nanoscale?

One of my hopes is to see researchers at universities across the world reading the great new articles in Nanoscale every day. This will mean Nanoscale will become a journal that more people will read, more people will cite and more people will contribute to.

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Andrea Ferrari joins Nanoscale Editorial Board

Andrea Ferrari photoNanoscale is delighted to announce the appointment of Professor Andrea Ferrari to our Editorial Board. Prof. Ferrari is Professor of Nanotechnology and Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award Holder, and is the head of the Nanomaterials and Spectroscopy Group at the University of Cambridge Engineering Department and Nanoscience Centre. He is Professorial Fellow of Pembroke College.

Prof. Ferrari’s wide range of research interests cover graphene electronics, devices, and carbon nanotubes.

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Professor Hongxing Xu joins Nanoscale Board

Professor Hongxing XuWe are delighted to announce that Professor Hongxing Xu of the Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences has joined the Editorial Board of Nanoscale.

Professor Xu completed his BA in Physics at Peking University, China in 1992 and then studied for his MA and PhD at the Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden. He worked as Assistant Professor at Lund University in Sweden before returning to China to take up his current position in 2005.

Professor Xu’s research interests cover surface-enhanced spectroscopy, nanophotonics, plasmonics and devices.

Read Prof. Xu’s recent communication in Nanoscale:

Can information of chemical reaction propagate with plasmonic waveguide and be detected at remote terminal of nanowire?
Mengtao Sun, Yanxue Hou and Hongxing Xu
DOI: 10.1039/C1NR10981B

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Nanoscale welcomes Prof. Xiaogang Liu to the Editorial Board

xiaogang liu photoNanoscale is delighted to announce that Professor Xiaogang Liu of the National University of Singapore has joined our Editorial Board.

His research interests cover a wide range of topics from chemistry to  materials science and bioinorganic chemistry. The work in his group covers the assembly of nanoscale building blocks into complex integrated systems through to the applications of these materials in catalysis and nanotechnology.

You can read some of Professor Liu’s recent articles in Nanoscale:

Self-aligned nanolithography by selective polymer dissolution
Huijuan Zhang, Chee-Leong Wong, Yufeng Hao, Rui Wang, Xiaogang Liu, Francesco Stellacci and John T. L. Thong
DOI: 10.1039/C0NR00398K

Tuning the shape and thermoelectric property of PbTe nanocrystals by bismuth doping
Qian Zhang, Ting Sun, Feng Cao, Ming Li, Minghui Hong, Jikang Yuan, Qingyu Yan, Huey Hoon Hng, Nianqiang Wu and Xiaogang Liu
DOI: 10.1039/C0NR00115E

Nanocontact-induced catalytic activation in palladium nanoparticles
Changlong Jiang, Sadananda Ranjit, Zhongyu Duan, Yu Lin Zhong, Kian Ping Loh, Chun Zhang and Xiaogang Liu
DOI: 10.1039/B9NR00093C

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Jie Liu joins Nanoscale as Editor-in-Chief

Professor Jie LiuNanoscale is delighted to announce that Professor Jie Liu of Duke University has joined the Nanoscale Editorial Board as co- Editor-in-Chief for North America, and will be handling submissions from early next year.

His research interests include controlled growth of single walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) for nanoelectronics, the synthesis, purification and applications of few walled carbon nanotubes (FWNTs), the optical properties of ZnO nanostructures and the study of microporous carbon (MPC) materials for energy applications.

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Nanoscale Board Member talks at Biophysical Society Meeting

Nanoscale Editorial Board member Molly Stevens (Imperial College London) gave a talk at the Annual Biophysical Society meeting yesterday.

This was the first time Professor Stevens had been invited to talk at the Biophysical Society Meeting, and her lecture on her research into tissue engineering was very well received. Her research focusses on the regeneration of tissue, with a focus on engineering new bone tissue.

She also discussed her collaborative research on sub-nanoscale patterning which she did with Francesco Stellacci’s group (Nanoscale Editor-in-Chief) – find out more about Nanoscale and our Editorial Board at www.rsc.org/nanoscale

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Nanoscale Editor-in-Chief confirmed as CAS President

Chunli BaiThe Chinese State Council announced yesterday that they have appointed Chunli Bai as the next president of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS).

Professor Bai has been the executive vice president of CAS since 2004, and will take over from former CAS President Lu Yongxiang.

The Nanoscale team would like to congratulate Professor Bai and we wish him all the best in his new role!

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New Advisory Board member for Nanoscale

We welcome our newest Advisory Board member, Professor Hong-Bo Sun from Jilin University.

Hong-Bo Sun obtained BS and PhD degrees in electronics from Jilin University. After spending some time in Japan, he returned to Jilin University to become a full professor in 2005.

His research in the passed 10 years has been focused on laser micro-nanofabrication, particularly in exploring novel laser technologies including direct writing and holographic lithography, as well as their applications on microoptics, micromachines, microfluids, and microsensors.

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We welcome Wei Lu to our Editorial Board

Nanoscale is pleased to announce the appointment of a new co-Editor-in-Chief, Professor Wei Lu.

Wei Lu graduated in physics from Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, from where he moved to Houston, Texas to obtain a PhD from Rice University.

He is currently an Assistant Professor in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, at the University of Michigan. His research interest lies in the application and fundamental understanding of nanostructures and nanodevices, including high-density memory and logic devices based on two-terminal resistive switches (memristors), and semiconductor nanowire based electronics.

Professor Lu will join Professors Bai, Niederberger, Stellacci and Wang in handling Nanoscale submissions. Welcome!



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