2012 Chemistry in Society Lectures

Dr. Ozin was recently in Vancouver, BC where he gave two 2012 CIC Chemistry in Society lectures at Simon Fraser University’s Department of Chemistry and School of Business.

The full lectures titled “Photonic Color: Lab-To-Market” and “Materiology: Past, Present, and Future” can be downloaded here and here.
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Research News Article on Front Cover of Advanced Materials

Our recent research news article on monodisperse silicon nanocrystals has been featured on the front cover of Advanced Materials (Adv. Mater. 2012, 24(43), 5890-5898).

You can read the full article here

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Materials Views Nanochannel Essay on Bioinspired Nanomaterials

Geoff’s latest Materials Views Nanochannel essay discusses biomimetics, the field of synthetic nanomaterials inspired by structural motifs found in Nature
Read the essay here.
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Article Highlighted in Nature Materials

Our group’s review article on using shape for self-assembly has been highlighted in the Materials Witness section of Nature Materials.

Read the highlight here and the article here.

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Dresden Nanomotors Workshop

Dr. Ozin gave the plenary lecture at the recent Micro and Nanomotors Workshop in Dresden, Germany.
The abstract from his lecture is given below.
The full presentation is also available for download here.

 

 

It is an honour, a privilege and a delight to deliver the closing lecture at the first international conference on nanomotors and nanomachine held in Dresden. This has become an exciting and flourishing new field, whose birth can be traced to seminal and independent publications from the groups of Sen and Mallouk at Pennsylvania State University and my own group at the University of Toronto. Having been in the field of nanochemistry most of my career, I had come to the realization about a decade ago that locomotion of nanoscale objects through a fluid environment that attempts to emulate Nature’s impressive nanomotors, is one of the grand challenges confronting nanoscience. Today it is clear from the burgeoning growth of nanomotor research around the world that the reduction to practice of locomotion through chemistry has ignited the imagination of a community of multidisciplinary research scientists, inspired to explore and understand the fundamental chemical and physical principles that underpin motion at these small scales. The vision is to synthesize and control, probe and measure, theoretically and experimentally understand, and ultimately utilize nanomotors made from nanoscale building blocks that derive on-board or off-board power from local chemical reactions and employ that power to do a job. At these very small length scales, the generated mechanical thrust must overcome viscous drag in order to allow them to move through a fluid phase while simultaneously or sequentially performing a single or series of tasks. Such tiny machines, individually or assembled into designed architectures, might someday pickup, transport and deliver medicine to a target site in the human body, conduct operations on and within cells, move cargo around microfluidic networks, and search and destroy toxic organics in polluted water streams. In this lecture, I ask, almost a decade after I first got involved in this research, are these “nanomachine dreams” or “dream nanomachines”? In my opinion, recent and exciting developments with functional nanomotors suggest we are on the verge of realizing a whole new world of purposeful nanomachines, orchestrated to perform a myriad of useful tasks for humanity from environmental remediation to tumor therapy.

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Materials Views Essay on the Development of Nanochemistry

The latest Materials Views NanoChannel essay celebrates the 20 year anniversary of the 1992 Advanced Materials paper Nanochemistry – Synthesis in Diminishing Dimensions. In the essay, Geoff compares the present state of the field to the expectations at the time of the above paper.
The full essay can be viewed here.
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Latest Materials Views Essay

In Geoff’s latest Materials Views NanoChannel Essay, he discusses our dependence on CO2 and and recent approaches to mitigating its effects as a greenhouse gas.
Read the essay here.
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Full Barrer Lecture

As the winner of the 2011 Barrer Award, Geoff will present a lecture at the 2012 meeting of the British Zeolite Association at the University of Chester on July 15-20.
You can read the full speech here.
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John Moir

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Navid Soheilnia

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