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UC Berkeley scientists develop new spectroscopic probe for the secrets of complex interfaces
Understanding the detailed nature of complex interfaces has become a quest of profound significance, as it underlies urgently needed advances in many applications, including water purification, desalination, and reclamation technologies, and is vital to central processes in...Read more about UC Berkeley scientists develop new spectroscopic probe for the secrets of complex interfaces
Professor Christopher Chang awarded the 2019 Sackler Prize in Chemistry
Christopher Chang, Professor of Chemistry and Molecular and Cell Biology at UC Berkeley has been awarded the Raymond and Beverly Sackler International Prize in Chemistry from Tel Aviv University. The prize recognizes distinguished scientists under age 45 who have made outstanding and...Read more about Professor Christopher Chang awarded the 2019 Sackler Prize in Chemistry
Congratulations to Jeffrey Long and Daniel Neumark on receiving 2019 ACS awards
UC Berkeley College of Chemistry professors Jeffrey Long and Daniel Neumark have been announced as 2019 American Chemical Society (ACS) awardees for their pioneering chemical research. They will be honored at a ceremony at the spring ACS national meeting in Orlando, Florida, March 31–April 4,...Read more about Congratulations to Jeffrey Long and Daniel Neumark on receiving 2019 ACS awards
"Chemical Engineering Design and Analysis" available in second edition
The new edition of "Chemical Engineering Design and Analysis" written by T. Michael Duncan, Cornell University, New York and Jeffrey A. Reimer, University of California, Berkeley will be available in February from Cambridge University Press. "Chemical Engineering Design and Analysis" puts...Read more about "Chemical Engineering Design and Analysis" available in second edition
Professor Nitash Balsara discusses ways to help the earth
Professor Balsara discusses ways to make better batteries through development, education and listening to students in this portrait for the Clean Energy Project produced by renowned photographer Rick Chapman whose work has been seen at the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery.Read more about Professor Nitash Balsara discusses ways to help the earth
Professor John Hartwig awarded the 2019 Wolf Prize in Chemistry
It was announced today that the 2019 Wolf Prize for Chemistry has been awarded to professors John F. Hartwig from University of California at Berkeley and Stephen L. Buchwald from MIT, for the development of efficient transition-metal catalysts that have revolutionized drug manufacturing,...Read more about Professor John Hartwig awarded the 2019 Wolf Prize in Chemistry
Chemists make first Re-Zn-Zn-Re molecule
Zinc-zinc bonds are rare in chemistry. So are linear four-metal compounds. Nevertheless, Trevor D. Lohrey, a member of John Arnold’s group at the University of California, Berkeley, has made the first molecule with a Re-Zn-Zn-Re core. Lohrey used a rhenium(I) salt to reduce ZnCl2 and make a...Read more about Chemists make first Re-Zn-Zn-Re molecule
Enrique Iglesia is the recipient of the 2019 Michel Boudart Award for the Advancement of Catalysis
Professor Enrique Iglesia of the University of California at Berkeley is the recipient of the 2019 Michel Boudart Award for the Advancement of Catalysis. The award is presented jointly by the North American Catalysis Society and the European Federation of Catalysis Societies.Read more about Enrique Iglesia is the recipient of the 2019 Michel Boudart Award for the Advancement of Catalysis
The importance of nurturing our undergraduate students
The Fannie and John Hertz Foundation announced its new class of fellows for 2018 in the spring, naming alumna Alexandra Brown (B.S. Chem, ’17) one of ten newly minted graduate students as a recipient. As an undergraduate at Berkeley, Brown worked in the research group of Professor John Arnold...Read more about The importance of nurturing our undergraduate students
UC Berkeley Chemists and the Periodic Table
Dimitri Mendeleev, a Russian chemist who in 1869 wrote out the known elements (of which there were 63 at the time) on cards and then arranged them in columns and rows according to their chemical and physical properties is considered the father of the Periodic Table. In celebration of the 150th...Read more about UC Berkeley Chemists and the Periodic Table
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