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Home » Archives for April 2026

April 2026

Archives for April 2026

Vu (Lynn) Nguyen, winner of the oral presentation award, holds a lavalier microphone in one hand and a clicker in the other as she delivers her oral presentation.

2026 Undergraduate Awards

April 24, 2026 by Jennifer Brown

On Saturday, April 11th the Rocky Top Chemistry Undergraduate Research Symposium took place in Mossman Hall, with undergraduate students participating in poster and oral presentation competitions. Following the symposium, chemistry undergraduates, family and friends attended the accompanying awards dinner where symposium awards and undergraduate scholarships were distributed. Congratulations to all of this year’s winners!

Symposium Award Winners

Oral Presentation Award Winner

Lynn Nguyen (Best Group) – Cysteine-Responsive Liposome for Cellular Delivery

Poster Presentation Award Winners

Emily Cameron (McNicholas Group) – Transition Metal Heliphyrin Complexes as Electrocatalysts for CO2 Reduction

Lindsey Morgan (Darko Group) – Photolytic Decomposition of Δ3-1,3,4-Oxadiazoline Precursors for in situ Generation of Dialkyl Metal Carbenes to Catalyze Intermolecular Si–H Insertions

Loudon Rogers (Zhao Group) – Synthesis of a Zwitterionic Polymer via Post-polymerization Modification

Ashton Dy (Vogiatzis Group) – Multi-Objective Reinforcement Learning for NLRP3 Inhibitor Discovery in Alzheimer’s Disease

Scholarship Award Winners

CRC Press General Chemistry Award – Abby Webb

C.W. Keenan Outstanding General Chemistry Student Award – Andrew Goans

ACS-Hach Land Grant Scholarship – Brooke Moore, Mackenzie Owens

Judson Hall Robertson Award in Analytical Chemistry – Lindsey Morgan

Melaven-Rhenium Scholarships – Paulie Chua, Lauren Kliesner, Alli Rumbaugh, Karlotta Schley, Shannon Willard

Phillip and Mary Reitano Scholarship – Karlotta Schley

Dr. Lucy E. Scroggie Scholarship – Neil Parek

Halbert and Anne Carmichael Scholarship – Lynn Nguyen

Eastman Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship – Anna Mahar

C.A. Buehler Chemistry Scholarship – Rahil Parik

Additional Announcements

2025 Science Undergraduate Laboratory Internship (SULI) at ORNL – Rahil Parik

ACS National Meeting Poster Award in Colloid Division – Ryan Millsaps

East Tennessee Section UT Senior Chemistry Student Award – Alden Dexter

A symposium participant points out an image on his poster while describing his research to Dr. Michael Best.
Vu (Lynn) Nguyen, winner of the oral presentation award, holds a lavalier microphone in one hand and a clicker in the other as she delivers her oral presentation.
Symposium attendees sit at long tables in the Mossman Hall lobby having lunch.
Rahil Parikh sets up for his oral presentation as Dr. Michael Best waits to introduce him.
Dr. Kevin Shaughnessy is talking with Dr. Nahla Hatab at a table in the Mossman lecture hall after the oral presentation session of the symposium.
A wide shot of the symposium poster session, including students, faculty members, and guests.
A table covered in a black tablecloth holds an upright copy of the symposium schedule, a glass scientific flask filles with purple and white flowers, and nametags for attendees.
A symposium participant describes the research shown on her poster.
Dr. Michael Best smiles as he introduces one of the symposium's oral presenters.
Michael Gutierrez delivers an oral presentation of his research. He is looking toward the screen and the top portion of his face is lit by the projector.
Three graduate students stand in front of a wall smiling at the camera.
Symposium participant Natalie Bacallao presents her poster to a graduate student and one of the symposium judges.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: symposium, Undergraduate

Professor David Jenkins

Jenkins Publication Investigates Metal-Organic Nanotube Interactions

April 24, 2026 by Jennifer Brown

Professor David Jenkins

Chemistry professor David Jenkins along with his graduate student Jacob Barrett and postdoc Phattananawee Nalaoh recently published an article in the Journal of the American Chemical Society (JACS). The article, entitled “Intertube Interactions in Multivariant Metal-Organic Nanotubes” highlights Jenkins’s exploration of the fundamental understanding of metal-organic nanotubes (MONTs). MONTs are a relatively new 1D subclass of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs).

In 2025, the Nobel prize in chemistry was awarded to three researchers working on MOFs.  MOFs are materials composed of metal ions linked together by organic molecules. The manipulation of these linkages can create materials for a variety of applications, including gas storage, chemical separations, and catalysis.

“The easiest way to think about a metal organic framework is to think about a cube that is infinite in all directions,” said Jenkins.  “Each vertex of the cube, each point, is a metal containing piece, and each edge on the cube is an organic group that connects the vertices. On the inside is a hole, which makes it porous, but these pores are on the nanometer scale.”

MONTs, the subject of Jenkins’s research, are a subclass on MOFs. However, instead of a cube, MONTs are tube-shaped structures, similar to straws. MONTs come together in small bundles, and the interactions between individual MONTs in those bundles have a greater impact on the MONTs’ properties.

“If you imagine a group of straws, they’re typically held together by the box or container they’re in. MONTs have very, very weak chemical interactions holding them together between the straws because there is no box on the outside. These are weaker forces than a classic chemical bond,” said Jenkins.  “In this paper, we looked at how different types of forces could be applied with different organic linkers on the tube, and how that would change the shape and interaction between them.”

PhD student Jacob Barrett is a member of the Jenkins research group.

Though MONTs are a fairly new material in comparison to MOFs, the Jenkins group has been investigating MONTs for over a decade. He and his team published one of the earliest large-scale papers on the synthesis of MONTs in 2014. Since then, they have continued developing the foundational knowledge necessary to discover potential future applications of MONTs. Their recent paper, co-authored by PhD student Jacob Barrett, provides another layer of understanding to that foundation.

“The small spaces in between matter a lot more for MONTs than they do for MOFs,” said Barrett.  “Understanding the interactions between MONTs is critical to understanding both how they will behave as a bulk material, and how we can tune their size and shape to achieve specific outcomes.”

This work was funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). The full article can be read on the ACS Publications website.

Filed Under: Inorganic Chemistry, News Tagged With: Jenkins, MOF

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