Author Archive

Reaction Chemistry & Engineering Emerging Investigator- Mustafa Kemal Bayazit

Dr Bayazit received his BSc and MSc degrees with honours in Chemistry. He was then awarded a fellowship by the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK) in 2007 to pursue a PhD at Durham University. In 2010, he joined ICL Chemistry as a PostDoc to research nanostructured hierarchical assemblies and composites. Mustafa moved to UCL Chemical Engineering in 2014. He developed a microwave-fluidic reactor for high throughput fabrication of nanomaterials (e.g. metal/metal oxide NPs and graphene) and used them in solar-to-energy applications. In 2019, he moved to Sabanci University Nanotechnology Research and Application Center, where he is currently an Associate Professor in Materials Science and Nanoengineering (http://myweb.sabanciuniv.edu/mkbayazit/). His research focuses on high throughput sustainable manufacturing of advanced inorganic/organic and inorganic/inorganic hybrids for energy materials, sensors, and functional surfaces. He is the recipient of TUBITAK 2232-A International Fellowship for Outstanding Researchers (2019), the finalist of the IChemE Global Research Project Awards (2022), a recipient of the COMSTECH Award (2022), and contributing team member of the IChemE Global Business Start-up Award (2019). He is also a member of the Royal Society of Chemistry.

 

Read Dr Mustafa Kemal Bayazit’s Emerging Investigator Series article, ‘Microwave-promoted continuous flow synthesis of thermoplastic polyurethane-silver nanocomposites and their antimicrobial performance’, DOI: 10.1039/D2RE00049K

Check out this video interview in which Mustafa talks about his recent publication, his future work and gives advice for early-career researchers

You can keep up to date with Mustafa’s research by following him on Twitter @mkemalbay or Instagram (nano_chem_al_ist)

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RCE Emerging Investigator- David Simakov

David Simakov received his Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology working on the design of catalytic membrane reformers for integrated fuel cell systems. After spending two years in industry on research and developing of a new generation of fuel cells based on anion-exchange membranes, he moved back to academia. He first participated in a joint Technion-Princeton University project working on reaction-diffusion modelling of the biological pattern formation and then moved to Harvard University, where he studied the nonlinear phenomena in catalytic oscillatory chemical systems. Prior to joining the University of Waterloo as an Assistant Professor, Dr. Simakov conducted his postdoctoral training in the Department of Chemical Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he worked on thermocatalysis and reactor design for solar thermal reforming. His main research expertise is synthesis of catalytic materials for heterogeneous catalysis applications, reactor design and system integration for thermocatalytic conversion applications. Currently, the main focus of Dr. Simakov’s research group is synthesis of thermocatalytic materials for transformation of CO2 into Renewable Synthetic Fuels and development of related sustainable processes.

Read David’s Emerging Investigator article, ‘Autothermal CO2 Hydrogenation Reactor for Renewable Natural Gas Generation: Experimental Proof-of-Concept’, DOI: 10.1039/D2RE00236A and check out our interview

 

How do you feel about RCE as a place to publish research on this topic?

RCE was a perfect fit for publishing my work.

What aspect of your work are you most excited about at the moment and what do you find most challenging about your research?

The most exciting aspect of my work is the actual practical implementation of the CO2 utilization process via thermocatalytic conversion in a highly efficient way.  

In your opinion, what are the most important questions to be asked/answered in this field of research?

The economic viability of the thermocatalytic CO2 conversion process must be investigated in detail.

Can you share one piece of career-related advice or wisdom with other early career scientists?

I would advise to be open-minded and to look for creative solutions.

You can follow David on LinkedIn to keep up to date with his research

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2022 RCE Outstanding Early-Career Award Winners: Kerry Gilmore and Karen Robertson

It is with our great pleasure to announce Prof. Kerry Gilmore (University of Connecticut, USA) and Prof. Karen Robertson (University of Nottingham, UK) as joint winners of the 2022 Reaction Chemistry & Engineering Outstanding Early-Career Paper Award.

This is in recognition of their leadership of the paper, ‘Rapid optimisation of API crystallisation in a segmented flow reactor with a continuous, variable temperature gradient’, DOI: 10.1039/D2RE00183G

Check out this bespoke infographic summarising the paper

Please join us in congratulating Prof. Gilmore and Prof. Robertson!

 

About the winners

Kerry Gilmore is an Assistant Professor at the University of Connecticut, USA. He received his PhD from Florida State University in 2012 and did a Postdoctoral Fellowship at the Max-Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces. He was a Research Group Leader at the same institution prior to his appointment at the University of Connecticut. Dr Gilmore’s research group use flow chemistry as a platform to provide reproducibility, efficiency and access to controlled reaction conditions. This approach is applied to a broad range of applications within organic chemistry, such as the development of new reactions, mechanistic studies and multistep synthesis. Find out more about the Gilmore Lab here
Karen Robertson is an Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Engineering at the University of Nottingham, UK. She completed her PhD at Imperial College London in 2012 focusing on targeting interconnected MOF architectures through multi-podal ligand design. She then worked closely with industry in a Knowledge Transfer Partnership between Clariant Oil Services and the University of Leeds developing new corrosion inhibitors and improved in vivo test methodology for the oil and gas industry. In 2013 she joined the EPSRC Centre for Innovative Manufacturing for Continuous Manufacturing and Crystallisation (CMAC, now a Future Manufacturing Hub) at the University of Bath focussing on crystal engineering techniques for agrochemical optimisation and the development of lab-based flow crystallisers. Dr Robertson is interested in using flow technologies to understand and control how self-assembling systems come together using a range of different flow regimes such as liquid segmented, single phase turbulent and laminar flow. Find out more about Dr Robertson’s research here.

 

Check out the interview with Prof. Robertson and Prof. Gilmore below:

Can you briefly summarise your paper?

KG: Reproducible crystal formation often remains one of the last great art forms in science, as a myriad of factors need to be controlled time after time in order to get not just crystals to form, but also the size and shape of crystals targeted. One of the easiest ways to form crystals is by dissolving a material in a hot solvent and slowly cooling that solution down. To date, technology has only allowed us to do this in flasks/tanks (batch processes), meaning that a discrete amount of sample can be crystallized at any one time. Flow chemistry offers significant advantages with respect to reproducibility as compared to batch, and allows for continuous operation, increasing output in a greener way. However, there was no way to create the smooth temperature gradient required for controlled crystallization. In this work, we discuss the development of a flow chemistry reactor that allows for a solution to pass through a variable temperature gradient, taking a heated solution and cooling it at the chosen rate. We show that this allows for controlled, reproducible, continuous crystal formation. This reactor platform will allow for a more standardized and even automated screening of crystal formation, with the potential to aid in understanding and predicting solubility.

 

What aspect of your work are you most excited about at the moment?

KG: I am most excited about the possibility to expand this platform to incorporate the ability to screen different solvent solutions and structural variants of a given target. That would allow us to automate the optimization of crystallization conditions. It would also ideally allow us to build a model that could predict whether reagents, byproducts, or products of a given reaction will be soluble, which would be very important for flow chemistry.

KR: I’m really excited about the strides we’ve been making integrating in situ X-ray diffraction with flow crystallisation. Our advances in new flow crystallisation control (such as the KRAIC-G) and the way we can now integrate single crystal and powder diffraction are coming together in a way that means we can explore and understand so much more.

 

Where do you see the field of flow chemistry in five years time?

KG: A combination of more inexpensive Lego-type systems that users can plug in what they want, with software guiding their development and controlling the developed system so non-experts can easily use it, and fully automated, remotely accessible platforms where users can simply log in, generate experimental data, make samples, in a fully reproducible manner without any physical equipment or expertise required in their labs. With open hardware, the rate at which developments and discoveries are made in chemistry will skyrocket.

KR: I think the highly interdisciplinary backbone of flow chemistry is really being embraced with data scientists, mathematicians, physicists and many more. I believe this will be a strength that increases going forwards in the next five years. We’ve seen amazing automation and machine learning enhanced leaps that I think will spread through the multivariant approaches already being developed and non-steady-state exploration of reaction pathways.

 

How do you feel about Reaction Chemistry & Engineering as a place to publish research on this topic?

KG: Reaction Chemistry & Engineering is a great journal, where pretty much every article is focusing on a different facet of the fields I’m interested in. It allows you to step back and, looking through each issue, see how the field is growing, developing, and really attacking the challenges we face in making molecules and understanding how to do that better.

KR: I think RCE is a great journal which appeals to both chemists and engineers. It can often be difficult to target where you publish new engineering approaches that enable new chemistries/understanding and I think RCE fills that gap perfectly.

 

How do you like to spend your time when not doing research?

KG: I spend pretty much all of my time outside of lab with my family (wife and two young daughters). I also really like woodworking and being outdoors, whether in the yard, walking in the woods, or being at the beach.

KR: I like to keep active either doing yoga, walking or climbing, living near the Peak District is great for that. Equally I’m as happy sitting reading a good book. Finding a way to switch off is essential in our world.

 

Can you share one piece of career-related advice for those beginning their research career?

KG: Stop stressing about what other people are doing, or that they are probably working much harder than you or publishing more than you. It’s fine. This is a long road, and if you focus too much on what everyone else is doing, you’re not going to have the mental health required to be creative or supportive – the two biggest skills you need to succeed. Go after problems that you think are interesting, work on projects that maybe take a bit longer at first to get going, because those are the ones that will pay off the most, and the ones that you’ll continue to be motivated to work on. If in starting a project you know what’s going to happen, and you know exactly how to get there, then that project is too easy and not worth doing.

KR: Talk to people. Lots of people. I get so many ideas and so much energy from just chatting with other researchers. Don’t be afraid to just go up to talk to someone or email someone, you never know how it can turn out. I met Kerry at a conference and the chat we had there turned into a friendship and this great piece of work we’ve published here 😊

 

Read the Open Access paper 

Rapid optimisation of API crystallisation in a segmented flow reactor with a continuous, variable temperature gradient

Karen Robertson, Peter H. Seeberger and Kerry Gilmore

React. Chem. Eng., 2023,8, 77-83, DOI: 10.1039/D2RE00183G

 

 

About the award

The aim of the Reaction Chemistry & Engineering Outstanding Early-Career Paper Award is to recognise a researcher in the earlier stages of their research career for their leadership in reporting original research published in the journal.

The journal Editorial Board award this prize annually, selecting the paper which they find to demonstrate the highest quality of research, as well as importance to the advancement of the field of reaction engineering, out of all qualifying papers published in the journal each year.

 

Eligibility

In order to be eligible for this award, the candidate must:

  • Be listed as a corresponding author on the paper
  • Currently be an independent research leader
  • Have either a) received their PhD on or after 1st January of the year 12 years prior to the award year (2009 for prize year 2021) or b) spent no more than an equivalent amount of time in research when taking into account any career breaks.
  • Have a paper featured in the journal’s Emerging Investigator Series – further information about eligibility for the Emerging Investigator Series can be found here. The Editorial Office will consider applications to the Series on their own merit; please contact us if you are interested in being considered for the series or nominating an exceptional early-career colleague.
  • Not be a previous winner of this award

 

Selection Process

To choose the winner of the 2021 Reaction Chemistry & Engineering Outstanding Early-Career Paper Award, a shortlist of eligible articles that were published throughout the year were selected by the editorial office and then subsequently assessed by the journal’s Editorial Board. The winner was selected based upon the significance, impact and quality of the research.

 

Prize

The winner of the Reaction Chemistry & Engineering Outstanding Early-Career Paper Award will receive an engraved plaque, a bespoke infographic from Impact Science for the winning paper and £500 cash award that would be used for conference travel/attendance of their choice.

To have your paper considered for the 2023 Reaction Chemistry & Engineering Outstanding Early-Career Paper Award, indicate when prompted upon submission of your revised manuscript if a corresponding author of the paper fulfils the criteria to feature in the Emerging Investigator Series. If accepted, your paper will be added to the ongoing collection and will be considered for the award. Multiple eligible authors of a winning paper will share the prize fund equally. You can contact the editors at reactionchemeng-rsc@rsc.org if you have any queries.

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2021 RCE Outstanding Early-Career Award Winner: Rosa Cuéllar-Franca

It is our great pleasure to announce Dr Rosa Cuéllar-Franca (University of Manchester, UK) as the winner of the 2021 Reaction Chemistry & Engineering Outstanding Early-Career Paper Award.

This is in recognition of her leadership of the paper, ‘A life cycle approach to solvent design: challenges and opportunities for ionic liquids – application to CO2 capture’, DOI: 10.1039/D0RE00409J

Check out this bespoke infographic summarising the paper

 

 

Please join us in congratulating Dr Cuéllar-Franca!

 

About the winner

 

Dr Rosa M. Cuéllar-Franca received her BEng in Chemical Engineering from the Technological Institute of Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico and her MSc in Environmental Technology and PhD in Chemical Engineering from The University of Manchester, under the supervision of Prof Adisa Azapagic. She is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Chemical Engineering at The University of Manchester and, prior to her appointment, she worked as a postdoctoral research associate on the programme grant “A coordinated comprehensive approach to carbon capture and utilisation”.

Rosa’s research focuses on the sustainability assessment of novel technologies for climate change mitigation, providing quantitative evidence that enables targeted improvements at various system levels, e.g. molecular and process design, process operation, policy making. She is an expert in life cycle assessment and life cycle costing, and her current work centres around developing more environmentally sustainable ionic liquids, catalysts and nanomaterials for cleaner technology development.

Read our interview with Dr Rosa Cuéllar-Franca

Can you briefly summarise your paper?

This work applies a life cycle thinking approach to evaluate the environmental sustainability performance of ionic liquids used in carbon capture with respect to conventional amine-based solvents. The main purpose of this work is to identify opportunities and make recommendations for improving ionic liquid-based technologies, such as addressing molecular-level weaknesses that will have a direct effect on the operating conditions of a process or exploiting their strength by redesigning separation equipment altogether.

What aspect of your work are you most excited about at the moment?

I am currently working on establishing correlations between the synthesis steps of ionic liquids and their environmental impacts to construct predictive models, in an effort to make environmental-related properties more accessible to researchers and scientists designing ionic liquids. I have developed, in collaboration with colleagues at Manchester and the University of Bologna, a proof of concept with a group of imidazolium-based ionic liquids and the results are promising.

Where do you see the field of ‘green’ solvent development for environmental applications in five years time?

Life cycle assessment will become an integral part in the design of new solvents and materials applied to low-carbon technologies to ensure that these are more environmentally sustainable on a life cycle basis and that climate change is not mitigated at the expense of other environmental impacts currently neglected but equally important.

How do you feel about Reaction Chemistry & Engineering as a place to publish research on this topic?

Reaction Chemistry & Engineering is a great platform for disseminating interdisciplinary research, which addresses environmental sustainability challenges across various industrial sectors. The journal evidently recognises the life cycle assessment (LCA) methodology as a powerful engineering tool for finding improved solutions for process development. I look forward to publishing and reading more LCA related studies in RC&E.

How do you like to spend your time when not doing research?

I enjoy traveling with my husband, visiting new places and spending quality time with our friends and family who live in different parts of the world such as Switzerland, Germany, California and Portland in the US, and of course my hometown Tijuana, located in the beautiful Baja California in Mexico. I also enjoy oil and watercolour painting, visiting art galleries and to read (preferably at the beach).

Can you share one piece of career-related advice for those beginning their research career?

Do not become discouraged if your research ideas are not being funded at first, you can be resourceful in other ways (e.g. applying for pump-priming funding, hosting visiting PhD students), to mature your idea into a proof of concept. You may have to do most of the work yourself, which will require time, patience and determination, but this also comes with immense rewards.

Building and relying on a research support network for guidance and mentoring is an invaluable resource.

 

Read the paper for FREE until 31 March 2023

 

A life cycle approach to solvent design: challenges and opportunities for ionic liquids – application to CO2 capture

Rosa M. Cuéllar-Franca, Pelayo García-Gutiérrez, Jason P. Hallett and Niall Mac Dowell

React. Chem. Eng., 2021,6, 258-278, DOI: 10.1039/D0RE00409J

 

About the award

The aim of the Reaction Chemistry & Engineering Outstanding Early-Career Paper Award is to recognise a researcher in the earlier stages of their research career for their leadership in reporting original research published in the journal.

The journal Editorial Board award this prize annually, selecting the paper which they find to demonstrate the highest quality of research, as well as importance to the advancement of the field of reaction engineering, out of all qualifying papers published in the journal each year.

 

Eligibility

In order to be eligible for this award, the candidate must:

  • Be listed as a corresponding author on the paper
  • Currently be an independent research leader
  • Have either a) received their PhD on or after 1st January of the year 12 years prior to the award year (2009 for prize year 2021) or b) spent no more than an equivalent amount of time in research when taking into account any career breaks.
  • Have a paper featured in the journal’s Emerging Investigator Series – further information about eligibility for the Emerging Investigator Series can be found here. The Editorial Office will consider applications to the Series on their own merit; please contact us if you are interested in being considered for the series or nominating an exceptional early-career colleague. 
  • Not be a previous winner of this award

Selection Process

To choose the winner of the 2021 Reaction Chemistry & Engineering Outstanding Early-Career Paper Award, a shortlist of eligible articles that were published throughout the year were selected by the Editorial Office and then subsequently assessed by the journal’s Editorial Board. The winner was selected based upon the significance, impact and quality of the research.

Prize

The winner of the Reaction Chemistry & Engineering Outstanding Early-Career Paper Award will receive an engraved plaque, a bespoke infographic from Impact Science for the winning paper and £500 cash award that would be used for conference travel/attendance of their choice.

To have your paper considered for the 2023 Reaction Chemistry & Engineering Outstanding Early-Career Paper Award, indicate when prompted upon submission of your revised manuscript if a corresponding author of the paper fulfils the criteria to feature in the Emerging Investigator Series. If accepted, your paper will be added to the ongoing collection and will be considered for the award. Multiple eligible authors of a winning paper will share the prize fund equally. You can contact the editors at reactionchemeng-rsc@rsc.org if you have any queries.

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RCE Emerging Investigator- Chengming Wang

Chengming Wang is a Professor at Jinan University, China. He earned his Ph.D. degree (2017) from RWTH Aachen University under the guidance of Professor Magnus Rueping. Thereafter he moved to Duke University, where he worked as a postdoctoral fellow (2018-2019) with Professor Qiu Wang. Since 2019, he has been a full professor at the chemistry department of Jinan University. His current research interests mainly include the developments of redox-neutral transformations, transition metal catalysis and novel radical chemistry.

Read Chengming’s Emerging Investigator article, ‘Copper-catalyzed Redox-neutral Regioselective Chlorosulfonylation of Vinylarenes’ , DOI: 10.1039/D1RE00188D

Check out our interview below:

How do you feel about RCE as a place to publish research on this topic?

The Emerging Investigator Series of RCE is a very good platform for excellent early-career researchers, who are making a difference in the chemistry community, to showcase and feature their initial work.

What aspect of your work are you most excited about at the moment and what do you find most challenging about your research?

One of the most excited aspects of our current work is to develop and explore new NHC-catalyzed aldehyde-free radical reactions to further extend the catalytic system which is firstly disclosed by us in 2019 (Org. Chem. Front. 2021, 8, 1454–1460.)

The most challenging part of this research is the detailed mechanism study.

In your opinion, what are the most important questions to be asked/answered in this field of research?

How to capture/characterize the proposed NHC radical cation intermediate? And how about the asymmetric version of your reaction?

Can you share one piece of career-related advice or wisdom with other early career scientists?

Follow the path chosen by yourself single-mindedly rather than the so-called short cut.

 

Find out more about Chengming Wang’s research on his group website

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