Trio of Papers on Luminescent Organic Materials
We have recently published three articles dealing with aggregation and resonance effects in luminescent organic materials. See our Publications page for links to the articles.
We have recently published three articles dealing with aggregation and resonance effects in luminescent organic materials. See our Publications page for links to the articles.
The group’s first PhD student defended her thesis entitled “Fluxional Carbon Cages and their ‘Shapeshifting’ Properties“ in on 19 July 2019.
Aisha’s incredible run of success with prizes and scholarships was capped off by the award of an extremely competitive All-Disciplines US–UK Fulbright Scholarship. From September, she will start as a Postdoctoral Researcher at Dartmouth College with the Aprahamian Group. Congratulations, Aisha!
Final-year PhD student Aisha Bismillah has been selected as a 2019 CAS Future Leader. The elite program looks for PhD students from around the world who they expect to ‘blaze a trail toward scientific leadership’.
Read the award annoncement (C&EN volume 97, issue 29) and Aisha’s profile on the CAS Future Leaders website, as well as excerpts from an interview with Aisha for an article on ‘The making of a PhD chemist’ (C&EN volume 96, issue 36).
Congratulations, Aisha!
The McGonigal Group has welcomed Burhan Hussein as a new PhD student through the EPSRC's Soft Matter and Functional Interfaces Centre for Doctoral Training (SOFI CDT). Burhan completed undergraduate and MSc degrees in Chemistry at Ryerson University, Toronto, before joining the SOFT CDT in October last year.
Paul has been selected as the recipient of the 2018 Molecules Young Investigator Award! The international prize is awarded to an early career researcher who has made 'significant contributions to the advancement/research of the science of chemistry'. Read more about the award at this link or in the prize announcement below.
Our manuscript on the 'Shape-Selective Crystallisation of Fluxional Carbon Cages' has just been accepted for publication in Chemical Science. We found that overall molecular shape, rather than any specific noncovalent interactions, controls the preferential crystallisation of shapeshifting barbaralane isomers from dynamic mixtures.
The paper has been selected as Chem. Sci. Pick of the Week and included in the 2018 Chemical Science HOT Article Collection, as well as being featured on the cover of Chem. Sci. 2018, 9, issue 46.
Congratulations to Aisha, who led the team, working together with other members of the McGonigal Group and our colleagues at Durham.
Paul and Abhijit attended the UUKi Rutherford Strategic Partner Grant Reception yesterday along with a group of Rutherford Fellows and staff from Durham. The event, which was held in the Shard, London, brought together some of the ~100 Rutherford Fellows who are currently based in 24 Universities around the UK.
Durham's Rutherford Contingent at the UUKi Rutherford Reception in the Shard, London.
l-r: Prof Claire Warwick (PVC Research), Dr Abhijit Mallick (Rutherford Fellow) Dr Pavan Yerramsetti (Rutherford Fellow), Dr Alyssa-Jennifer Avestro (Rutherford Award Holder), Dr Paul McGonigal (Rutherford Award Holder), Dr Ali Huerta-Flores (Rutherford Fellow)
Earlier this year, Paul successfully led Durham's bid to bring four Rutherford Fellows to the University for research visits during 2018/19. The four Fellows, Dr Abhijit Mallick, Dr Pavan Yerramsetti, Dr Woon Kai Lin, and Dr Ali Huerta-Flores, are currently being hosted in the Chemistry, Physics, and Engineering Departments as part of the McGonigal, Avestro, Monkman, and Groves groups. The four Rutherford Fellows and their four Hosts are pictured below.
Two researchers have joined the team in the past month. Dr Abhijit Mallick, who completed a PhD at the Indian Association for the Cultivation of Sciences, commenced a Rutherford Fellowship at the end of March. During the 12-month Fellowship, Abhijit will synthesise redox-active materials in the McGonigal Group, then assess their energy storage properties with collaborators in the Durham Energy Institute.
This week, Jack Williamson has joined the group as a PhD student through the EPSRC's Soft Matter and Functional Interfaces Centre for Doctoral Training (SOFI CDT). Prior to starting in the McGonigal Group, he completed six months of SOFI CDT training, having joined the programme after completing a MChem degree at Durham.
Welcome to Abhijit and Jack!
Our first paper has just been accepted for publication in The Journal of the American Chemical Society! The article describes the inter- and intramolecular interactions that can occur between even simple aromatic groups (e.g., phenyl rings) in fluorescent molecular rotors.
Congratulations in particular to Jiri Sturala, who carried out much out of the research, working in collaboration with other members of the McGonigal Group as well as colleagues in Durham's Chemistry and Physics Departments - the Avestro Group, Monkman Group and others.
Second-year PhD student Aisha Bismillah has been selected for a Scholarship by the British Federation of Women Graduates (BFWG). After submitting a research proposal and attending an interview in London in early July, she has been awarded the Marjorie Shaw Scholarship – one of the handful of named BFWG awards given out annually across all disciplines for academic excellence. Well done, Aisha!
Shortly after being selected for the scholarship, Aisha attended a reception at Durham's Collingwood College, where she met the members of the BFWG's North Eastern Association.
Background of the Marjorie Shaw Scholarship
Marjorie Shaw studied French and was awarded a Doctorat de l’Université de Paris She was Senior Lecturer in the Department of French at Sheffield University with a particular interest in 19th century French literature but she was devoted to the work of BFWG and of the International Federation of University Women (now Graduate Women International: GWI). Awards in her name are for research in any discipline.
The group has recently welcomed Ketaki Samanta, a visiting PhD student from the Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science, Kolkata. Ketaki will be a part of the group for four months with the support of a Newton–Bhaba Fellowship. In Durham, she will apply her expertise in donor–acceptor conjugated molecules to investigate functionalised cycloheptatrienes.
Aisha took part in the Durham University heats for the Three-Minute Thesis (3MT) Competition. She made it through to the university final, having won first place in the Faculty of Science round. Congratulations, Aisha!
The 3MT is an international competition that celebrates the work of PhD students by challenging them to explain their research in a compelling, short presentation, using language suitable for a non-specialist audience.
The McGonigal Group ended the year by attending the RSC's annual macrocyclic and supramolecular chemistry meeting (MASC), which was held in Edinburgh this year. The meeting was a great opportunity for us catch up on the latest developments in the field, meet other reseachers from around the UK, and to see the first lecture from Nobel Laureate, Prof Fraser Stoddart, after he received his award in Stockholm.
Aisha presented a poster of her recent results, which was awarded one of the five poster prizes on the final day. Congratulations, Aisha!
October marked the beginning of the new academic year and brought three new members to the McGonigal group. Andrew Turley (MChem, Newcastle University 2016) began his PhD at the same time as Durham undergraduates Mary Gibbins and Edward Mitchell officially started their final-year research projects.
For more information about Andrew, Mary, and Edward, see the group members pages.
Brette Chapin joined the McGonigal Group at the start of September, having recently completed her PhD at UT Austin. During her PhD in the Anslyn Group, Brette investigated the fluorescent response of boronic acid hosts to saccharide binding. In Durham, she'll use her background in physical organic chemistry to study shapeshifting cations and redox-active hosts.
We recently received delivery of two Büchi R-100 rotavap systems for laboratory CG233.
For more photographs of our laboratory space, see the virtual Laboratory Tour.
MChem student Gemma Parker has graduated from the McGonigal Group and Durham University. After a well-earned break over the summer, she will move to the University of Warwick, Coventry, to study for a PhD in the Chaplin Group, where she will investigate agostic interactions in organometallic complexes. Good luck, Gemma!
Gemma had a run of success towards the end of the academic year, graduating with a first class honours degree and winning two poster prizes – one for the best MChem Project Poster in the Chemistry Department (the David Brinley Adams Prize) and the second at Durham University's 2016 Rising Stars Research Symposium. The photo below shows Gemma being awarded the David Brinley Adams Prize by the Head of Department, Prof Mark Wilson.
Aisha picked up her second poster award in a month, winning the second-place prize at the RSC's 2016 North West Organic Division Regional Meeting at the University of Central Lancashire.
The conference gave Aisha the opportunity to return to her alma mater for the first time since graduating a year ago. Congratulations on the successful homecoming, Aisha!
Aisha has been awarded the a prize for the Best Faculty of Science Poster at the Durham University Reserachers' Poster Competition. The goal of annual university-wide competition is to effectively communicate research to members of the public and to fellow students from different disciplines.
The Chancellor of Durham University - Sir Thomas Allen - presented Aisha with her award. Congratulations Aisha!
On April 6, the McGonigal Group made the short trip north to Newcastle to attend the RSC's Organic Division North East Regional Meeting 2016. Jiří's poster 'Cycloheptatrienes – a New Class of Luminogenic Materials' was awarded a Poster Prize, sponsored by AstraZeneca. Congratulations Jiří!
As well as presenting posters, Paul, Aisha, and Jiří had the chance to hear about some exciting chemistry coming out of universities in the North East and to listen to plenary lectures from two RSC prize winners, Professors David O'Hagan and Michael Krische.