Archive for January, 2023

Wishing you a happy Year of the Rabbit!

From all of us here at Chemical Science, we would like to wish you a Happy Year of the Rabbit! In celebration we are delighted to present a special collection of our most popular recent articles, highlighting the work of authors from across China.

Chemical Science Happy New Year

You can find the full collection here and we have highlighted a selection of these below.

Read our Chinese New Year collection here

We also have four dedicated Chinese Associate Editors: Prof. Jinlong Gong at Tianjin University, Prof. Zaiping Guo at the University of Adelaide, Prof. Ning Jiao at Peking University and Prof. Yi-Tao Long at Nanjing University.

Professor Gong is interested in heterogeneous catalysis and kinetics with a focus on catalytic conversions of small molecules, production of hydrogen energy, and syntheses and applications of nanostructured catalytic materials. Professor Guo’s research interests include the design and application of electrode materials and electrolyte for energy storage and conversion, including rechargeable batteries, hydrogen storage, and fuel cells. Professor Jiao’s current research efforts are focused on new methodology development in atom-incorporation reactions, first-row transition metal catalysis and inert chemical bonds functionalization, and the synthesis of bioactive compounds and drug discovery. Professor Long is interested in the development of new electrochemical measurement methods to reveal the characteristics and dynamics of single entities.

 

Prof. Jinlong Gong Prof. Zaiping Guo
Prof. Jinlong Gong Prof. Zaiping Guo
Prof. Ning Jiao Prof. Yi-Tao Long
Prof. Ning Jiao Prof. Yi-Tao Long

 

We are pleased to send along their best wishes to our authors, reviewers, and readers.

 

Prof. Jinlong Gong: 衷心感谢各位读者、作者、编委和朋友对Chemical Scienc

e的厚爱与支持,何其有幸,年岁并进!启一元复始,待四序更新,衷心祝福大家大展宏兔,兔步青云,奋发兔强,万事顺遂!

Prof. Zaiping Guo: 副主编郭再萍向大家拜年了,感谢作者,审稿人,以及读者朋

友们一直以来对Chemical Science的支持, 在兔年到来之际,我们衷心的期待与您的进一步合作,携手再创一个丰收的2023!祝大家新年快乐,身体健康,工作顺利,万事如意!

Prof. Ning Jiao: 感谢大家长期以来对 Chemical Science的支持和帮助!兔年就要到了,衷心祝愿所有关心 Chemical Science的朋友们新的一年大展宏“兔”、工作“兔”飞猛进!恭祝大家新春愉快!身体健康!阖家幸福!皆得所愿!

Prof. Yi-Tao Long: 感谢Chemical Science的读者、作者、编委及广大朋友的厚爱,新的一年我们将更加努力,期待大家的继续关注和支持。恭祝各位老师兔年吉祥,身体健康,万事如意!

 

Stay up to date with Chemical Science by signing up to receive news and issue alerts here

 

Chinese New Year Special Collection Highlights:

 

NIR TADF emitters and OLEDs: challenges, progress, and perspectives
Xiao, Yuxin; Wang, Hailan; Xie, Zongliang; Shen, Mingyao; Huang, Rongjuan; Miao, Yuchen; Liu, Guanyu; Yu, Tao; Huang, Wei
Chem. Sci., 2022, 13, 8906-8923
Review Article

Cu-catalyzed enantioselective decarboxylative cyanation via the synergistic merger of photocatalysis and electrochemistry
Yuan, Yin; Yang, Junfeng; Zhang, Junliang
Chem. Sci., 2022, 14, 705-710
Edge Article

Surfactant-chaperoned donor–acceptor–donor NIR-II dye strategy efficiently circumvents intermolecular aggregation to afford enhanced bioimaging contrast
Han, Tianyang; Wang, Yajun; Xu, Jiajun; Zhu, Ningning; Bai, Lang; Liu, Xiangping; Sun, Bin; Yu, Chenlong; Meng, Qinglun; Wang, Jiaqi; Su, Qi; Cai, Qing; Hettie, Kenneth S.; Zhang, Yuewei; Zhu, Shoujun; Yang, Bai
Chem. Sci., 2022, 14, 13201-13211
Edge Article

Exhaustive Baeyer–Villiger oxidation: a tailor-made post-polymerization modification to access challenging poly(vinyl acetate) copolymers
Ma, Pengfei; Plummer, Christopher M.; Luo, Wenjun; Pang, Jiyan; Chen, Yongming; Li, Le
Chem. Sci., 2022, 14, 11746-11754
Edge Article

We hope you enjoy reading this selection of articles from our collection celebrating the Chinese New Year.

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Chemical Science Reviewer Spotlight – January 2023

To further thank and recognise the support from our excellent reviewer community, we are highlighting reviewers who have provided exceptional support to the journal over the past year.

This month, we’ll be highlighting Esther Heid, Nicholas White, Sarit Agasti and Sharon Neufeldt. We asked our reviewers a few questions about what they enjoy about reviewing, and their thoughts on how to provide a useful review.

Esther Heid, Technische Universität Wien.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Esther Heid, Technische Universität Wien. Esther’s research focuses on machine learning and heuristics to describe the properties of molecules and chemical reactions.

Nicholas White, Australian National University

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nicholas White, Australian National University. Nicholas’ group are focussed on supramolecular chemistry. They are particularly interested in systems that can self-assemble in water, for example cage molecules and hydrogen bonded frameworks.

Sarit Agasti, Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sarit Agasti, Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR). The central theme of Sarit’s research is ‘Molecular recognition in synthetic systems. Areas of application include super-resolution imaging, sensing, and developing new approaches for delivering and activating therapeutic materials.

 

Sharon Neufeldt, Montana State University.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sharon Neufeldt, Montana State University. The Neufeldt lab’s research focuses on mechanistic organometallic chemistry, with a particular interest in controlling the selectivity of transition metal catalysts.

 

What encouraged you to review for Chemical Science?

Sharon Neufeldt: Chemical Science publishes a lot of work that is relevant to my group’s research interests, so I am generally interested in supporting this journal through peer review. Furthermore, my experience publishing in Chem. Sci. was really amazing – we received the most constructive and thorough reviewer comments I’ve ever had, which gave me a deeper appreciation of this journal’s review process.

Nicholas White: I think reviewing is an important part of the job. I submit papers and expect people to review them, so it’s only fair that I return the favour. I really like reviewing for Chemical Science in particular because most of the papers I review are high quality and interesting – they’re papers I’ll end up reading any way so it’s fun to review them.

 

What do you enjoy most about reviewing?

Esther Heid: I enjoy helping researchers improve their work by providing constructive comments. Furthermore, it is exciting to read about the newest research before it is actually published.

Sarit Agasti: Besides reading science first-hand, I enjoy giving critical thinking to an experimental outcome or an unusual finding. The thing about being a reviewer is that you get to clarify your doubts directly from the authors-which is precious.

 

What advice would you give a first-time author looking to maximise their chances of successful peer review?

Nicholas White: Minimise the hype! Reviewers are researchers themselves and can see through it straight away. Personally, if a paper starts with two paragraphs of hyperbole about improbable applications or changing the world or “paradigm shifts,” I get pretty grumpy. I’d much rather read a paper that probes an important question, is open about its limitations and comes to valid conclusions than one that makes outlandish claims. I’d also suggest being selective with your citations, huge lists of citations just make it harder to find the really relevant prior work.

Sharon Neufeldt: It’s so important to clearly articulate why your research matters and how it represents an advance in knowledge or application. If a reviewer happens to be one of the small number of other researchers in the world working on nearly the same thing, they will immediately recognize the importance without you having to spell it out. However, it’s more likely that one or more of your reviewers will be pretty unfamiliar with the specifics of the research area and can’t easily appreciate why your work is exciting unless you make it obvious.

 

What makes a paper truly stand out for you when reviewing a paper?

Esther Heid: In my opinion, high-quality manuscripts should be compelling, reproducible, and supported by data. A great piece of research might not get published if it is written poorly, has no clear message or is described insufficiently, thus constructing a compelling story is a must. A manuscript that is not reproducible due to missing information or code cannot produce a large impact on the community. Finally, a bold conclusion that is not or only partially supported by data might prove false later and hinder scientific advancement.

 

What has been your biggest learning point from reviewing?

Esther Heid: When writing a manuscript, I try to look at it also from the perspective of a reviewer: Is the message clear, interesting, and supported by data? Is the given information enough to reproduce all results? Through reviewing, I learned to focus on these important points.

 

How do you balance reviewing with your other activities?

Sarit Agasti: I usually give a few thorough readings before I am ready to write the comments. I try to include the reading part within my daily schedule of reading newly published articles. Once I am prepared to write the comments, I book the earliest empty slot in my calendar and finish the review.

Tune in next month to meet our next group of #ChemSciReviewers!

 

If you want to learn more about how we support our reviewers, check out our Reviewer Hub.

Interested in joining our ever-growing reviewer community? Apply here now!

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Chemical Science HOT Articles: December 2022

We are pleased to share a selection of our referee-recommended HOT articles for December 2022. We hope you enjoy reading these articles, congratulations to all the authors whose articles are featured! As always, Chemical Science is free for authors and readers.

You can explore our full 2022 Chemical Science HOT Article Collection here!

 

Browse a selection of our December HOT articles below:

Multiple C–C bond formation upon electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 by an iron-based molecular macrocycle
Si-Thanh Dong, Chen Xu and Benedikt Lassalle-Kaiser
Chem. Sci., 2023, Advance Article

The anti-breast cancer stem cell properties of gold(i)-non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug complexes
Alice Johnson, Chibuzor Olelewe, Jong Hyun Kim, Joshua Northcote-Smith, R. Tyler Mertens, Ginevra Passeri, Kuldip Singh, Samuel G. Awuah and Kogularamanan Suntharalingam
Chem. Sci., 2023, Advance Article

Vacancy-cluster-mediated surface activation for boosting CO2 chemical fixation
Wenxiu Liu, Lei Li, Wei Shao, Hui Wang, Yun Dong, Ming Zuo, Jiandang Liu, Hongjun Zhang, Bangjiao Ye, Xiaodong Zhang and Yi Xie
Chem. Sci., 2023, Advance Article

Streptocyanine as an activation mode of amine catalysis for the conversion of pyridine rings to benzene rings
Tatsuya Morofuji, Shota Nagai, Airi Watanabe, Kota Inagawa and Naokazu Kano
Chem. Sci., 2023, Advance Article

Thermally activated delayed fluorescence with dual-emission and pressure-induced bidirectional shifting: cooperative effects of intramolecular and intermolecular energy transfer
Chenyue Zhao, Zhipeng Ding, Yibin Zhang, Zhigang Ni, Shijun Li, Shaolong Gong, Bo Zou, Kai Wang and Ling Yu
Chem. Sci., 2023, Advance Article

On-surface synthesis of non-benzenoid conjugated polymers by selective atomic rearrangement of ethynylarenes
Alejandro Jiménez-Martín, Federico Villalobos, Benjamin Mallada, Shayan Edalatmanesh, Adam Matěj, Juan M. Cuerva, Pavel Jelínek, Araceli G. Campaña and Bruno de la Torre
Chem. Sci., 2023, Advance Article
 

Chemical Science, Royal Society of Chemistry

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