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Home » Artsci » Page 5

Artsci

Hazari Celebrates NCW With His 30th Annual “Magic of Chemistry Show”

October 21, 2020 by Kayla Benson

National Chemistry Week (NCW) is a community-based program of the American Chemical Society (ACS). This annual program unites ACS local sections, student chapters, technical divisions, businesses, schools, and individuals in communicating the importance of chemistry to our quality of life. NCW occurs annually during the third week of October.

The mission of NCW is to reach the public, particularly elementary and secondary school children, with positive messages about chemistry to:

  • Make a positive change in the public’s impression of chemistry;
  • Promote a mechanism for effectively mobilizing ACS local sections; and
  • Motivate the ACS membership through local section activities.

NCW 2020, October 18–24
Topic: Glues and Adhesives
Theme: Sticking with Chemistry

Hazari Celebrated NCW With His 30th Annual “Magic of Chemistry Show.”

Hazari is a retired UT chemistry professor has spent the past 30 years putting on science shows for audiences all over East Tennessee.

Filed Under: Artsci, Hazari, NCW, News

Campagna Gives Talk for Harvard’s MSI Seminar Series

October 19, 2020 by Kayla Benson

The Microbial Sciences Initiative (MSI) at Harvard University is an interdisciplinary science program aimed at a comprehensive understanding of the richest biological reservoir of the planet, the microbial world.

Shawn Campagna presented a talk for this series titled “Using Metabolomics to Understand the Function of Environmentally Relevant Microbial Consortia.”

 

Filed Under: Analytical Chemistry, Artsci, Campagna, News

Calhoun Lab Featured Cover in J. Phys. Chem. C

October 16, 2020 by Kayla Benson

The Calhoun Lab was published in the Journal of Physical Chemistry C for their research “Leaving the Limits of Linearity for Light Microscopy” and it is a perspective on the recent advances in the field of nonlinear microscopy. This article is also the featured cover for the November 12, 2020 issue.

Graduate student authors include Marea Blake and Brandon Colon.  Blake is currently pursuing her Ph.D. in Chemistry at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Her current research focuses on probing small molecule-membrane interactions in living cells using nonlinear techniques such as second harmonic generation and two-photon fluorescence.

Colon received his B.S. degree (2016) in Chemistry from the University of West Florida in Pensacola, FL. He is a doctoral student at the University of Tennessee under the tutelage of Prof. Tessa Calhoun. He has been investigating the use of total internal reflection illumination geometries to apply nonlinear microscopy techniques to microfluidic samples.

In this paper, the group highlights recent developments within the past couple of years pertaining to how nonlinear microscopy methods such as transient absorption, 2D nonlinear microscopy, second order processes, and quantum microscopy are being implemented to probe different timescales, access information on interfaces and illuminate samples with novel excitation schemes. 

“Our group actually uses a few of these methods (such as TAM, SHG and TIR geometry excitation) in our lab so it was really exciting getting to portray that in this perspective and explore the directions they can grow,” Blake said.

Filed Under: Artsci, Calhoun, News

Best Group’s Recent Work

October 12, 2020 by Kayla Benson

Recent work in the Best Group has culminated in the development of stimuli-responsive liposomes for drug delivery designed to release therapeutic cargo when they come into contact with diseased cells, specifically based on overexpressed enzymes and reactive oxygen species. “These smart liposomes show strong prospects for advancing drug delivery by targeting therapeutics directly to the site of the disease,” Jinchao Lou, graduate student in the Best Group, said.

Liposomes are effective nanocarriers for drug delivery due to their ability to encapsulate and deliver a wide variety of therapeutic cargo to cells. Nevertheless, liposome delivery would be improved by enhancing the ability to control the release of contents within diseased cells. Toward this end, stimuli-responsive liposomes, in which the drug carrier decomposes when it comes in contact with conditions associated with disease, are of great interest for enhancing drug potency while minimizing side effects.

While various stimuli have been explored for triggering liposome release, both enzymes and reactive oxygen species (ROS) provide excellent targets due to their key roles in biology and overabundance in diseased cells. In two separate papers, the Best Group presented a general approach to enzyme‐responsive liposomes exploiting targets that are commonly aberrant in disease, including esterases, phosphatases, and β‐galactosidases (Chem. Eur. J. 2020, 26, 8597-8607), as well as an ROS-responsive liposomal delivery platform (Bioconjugate Chem. 2020, 31, 2220-2230).

In both of the cases, responsive lipids designed to target each stimulus were designed and synthesized bearing a responsive headgroup attached via a self‐immolating linker to a non‐bilayer lipid scaffold. In this way, stimulus addition triggers chemical lipid decomposition in a manner that disrupts membrane integrity and releases contents. Release properties were fully characterized by fluorescence-based dye leakage assays, dynamic light scattering and electron microscopy, among other techniques.

Due to their recent works in this field, the Best group was also invited to write a review describing advances in the design of stimuli-responsive liposome strategies for drug delivery with an eye towards emerging trends in the field (Chem. Phys. Lipids. In Press. DOI 10.1016/j.chemphyslip.2020.104966). Smart liposomes show strong prospects for advancing drug delivery by targeting drugs directly to the site of the disease.

Filed Under: Artsci, Best, News, Organic Chemistry

ORI Names Campagna Interim Director of Strategic Programs

September 15, 2020 by Kayla Benson

President Randy Boyd shared some developments at the Oak Ridge Institute at UT (ORI at UT). A national search for the first executive director and vice provost of the Oak Ridge Institute at UT is underway.

Shawn Campagna
Shawn Campagna

ORNL Director Thomas Zacharia and Randy Boyd, in consultation with UT Knoxville Chancellor Donde Plowman and UT Health Science Center Chancellor Steve Schwab, have named Michelle Buchanan, ORNL deputy for science and technology, and Stacey Patterson, UT System vice president for research, as interim co-directors of ORI at UT until a director is named. Suresh Babu, a UT-ORNL Governor’s Chair for Advanced Manufacturing and Bredesen Center Director, will serve as ORI at UT’s interim education director. Shawn Campagna, UT Knoxville associate department head of chemistry and Director of Science Alliance, will serve as the interim director of strategic programs. Jean Mercer, UT Knoxville assistant vice chancellor for research and director of the office of sponsored programs, will serve as interim director of operations.

Filed Under: Analytical Chemistry, Artsci, Campagna, News

Collier at Kennesaw State University

September 15, 2020 by Kayla Benson

Graham Collier, originally from Fayetteville, North Carolina, received his BS in chemistry in 2011 from the University of North Carolina Wilmington. Upon graduation, Collier enrolled in the graduate program at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and studied porphyrin chromophores under the direction of Michael Walter. After graduating in 2013, Collier enrolled in the chemistry doctoral program at UT with a concentration in polymer chemistry.
 
Collier’s dissertation entailed studying structure-property relationships of purine-based polymers and chromophores under the guidance of Mike Kilbey. Collier received his PhD in 2017 and began his position as postdoctoral research associate at Georgia Tech studying conjugated polymers for electrochromic under the mentorship of John Reynolds. Collier joined the faculty of Kennesaw State University as a tenure-track assistant professor of Chemistry in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry in fall of 2020.
 
Research in the Collier Group resides at the interface of organic, polymer, and materials chemistry. “We are interested in utilizing precise monomer synthesis to incorporate functional building blocks into polymeric materials with targeted macromolecular properties,” said Collier. “Specific interests include synthesis and characterization of conjugated polymer and molecule systems to understand how structure influences optical and electrochemical properties.”
 
Research in the Collier Research Group at KSU will involve the synthesis and characterization of organic molecules and polymers that find applicability in thin film electronics. The group will work to develop new polymers and molecules by manipulating their fundamental chemical structure to obtain targeted properties.
 
 
 
 

 

Filed Under: alumni, Artsci, Kilbey, News

Brantley & Long’s Collaborative Research

September 7, 2020 by Kayla Benson

The Brantley Lab and the Long Group published collaborative research “Vinyl-addition polymerizations of cycloallenes: synthetic access to congeners of cyclic-olefin polymers” in Polymer Chemistry. Co-first authors include Nick Galan with the Brantley Lab and Justin Burroughs with the Long Group. 

Their research demonstrates that vinyl-addition polymerization of cycloallenes is a potentially valuable strategy for preparing tunable analogues of cycloolefin polymers. Cycloallenes can be polymerized in a well-controlled manner at room temperature using a simple Ni catalyst. 

“This route does not require high strain monomers to achieve cyclic motif incorporation, and copolymerization with acyclic monomers is possible, but not required to achieve good conversion,” Galan said. “Taken together, these results suggest that vinyl-addition polymerizations of cyclic allenes could provide a reliable synthetic route toward heretofore inaccessible materials.”

Learn More

Filed Under: Artsci, News

Musfeldt Group’s Recent Achievements

September 1, 2020 by Kayla Benson

The Musfeldt Group’s research area focuses on experimental materials chemistry and physics. They employ a variety of spectroscopic methods to reveal and control the properties of quantum materials. External stimuli are used to tune these properties in order to explore new physical phenomena and uncover properties of technological relevance.

The Musfeldt Group provides a very unique opportunity for students with the DMREF team (Designing Materials to Revolutionize and Engineer our Future). This year, the team received “The Creativity Extension which is the highest honor in DMR,” Musfeldt said. “The team received an extra $450,000 for it this year.”

The group has also been busy publishing papers such as “Piezochromism in the magnetic chalcogenide MnPS3” in npj Quantum Materials. Nathan Harms, graduate student in the Musfeldt Group, is the lead author. This research explores combining high-pressure optical spectroscopies and first-principles calculations to reveal piezochromism in MnPS3. Photographs are of piezochromic MnPS3 inside the diamond anvil cell at several characteristic pressures and also after release at room temperature. These images show a gasket hole diameter of 325 μm. The diamond culets are 500 μm.

Musfeldt was also published a cover article in Physics Today titled “Nanotubes from layered transition metal dichalcogenides.”

 

Filed Under: Artsci, Musfeldt, News

Dai Group Published in Nature Communications for Entropy-stabilized Single-atom Pd Catalysts Research

August 24, 2020 by Kayla Benson

The Dai Lab’s research “Entropy-stabilized single-atom Pd catalysts via high-entropy fluorite oxide supports” was published in Nature Communications. First Author Haidi Xu conducted research in the Dai Lab as a visiting scholar from Sichuan University, China. 

This work explores single-atom catalysts (SACs) as they have demonstrated superior catalytic performance in the catalysis community. Fabricating intrinsically stable SACs on traditional supports remains a formidable challenge, especially under high-temperature conditions.

The Dai Lab propose a new strategy to construct a sintering-resistant Pd single-atom on a novel equimolar high-entropy fluorite oxides (CeZrHfTiLa)Ox (HEFO) as the support by simply mechanical milling with calcination at 900 °C.

Characterization results reveal that single Pd atoms are incorporated into HEFO (Pd1@HEFO) sublattice by forming stable Pd–O–M bonds (M=Ce/Zr/La) compared to Pd-O-Pd (PdOx clusters) bonds of Pd@CeO2 synthesized by the same method with the traditional support, thus exhibiting not only higher low-temperature CO oxidation activity but also outstanding resistance to thermal and hydrothermal degradation. T

“This work exemplifies the superiority of high-entropy materials for the preparation of SACs,” Xu said.

Learn More

Filed Under: Artsci, News

Jenkins Group Published in ACS Nano

August 19, 2020 by Kayla Benson

Kristina VailonisResearch from the Jenkins Group was recently published in ACS Nano for their work “In Situ Monitoring of the Seeding and Growth of Silver MetalOrganic Nanotubes by Liquid-Cell Transmission Electron Microscopy“. Kristina Vailonis was one of the primary authors of this piece. Vailonis recently graduated with her PhD from the University of Tennessee’s Department of Chemistry.

Metal–organic nanotubes (MONTs)  are highly ordered one-dimensional crystalline porous frameworks. Despite being nanomaterials, virtually all studies of MONTs rely on characterization of the bulk crystalline material (micron-sized) by single-crystal X-ray diffraction.

This research analyzes their formations under a variety of reaction conditions in solution, and employ liquid-cell transmission electron microscopy (LCTEM), which allows the early stages of MONT assembly to be monitored in real time.

Changing the metal-to-ligand ratio alters the local concentrations of reactant monomers, resulting in multiple nucleation and growth pathways and diverse morphologies at the nanoscale.

“As we develop MONTs, it is critical to characterize them on the nanoscale before they have grown into bulk 3D materials that are microns in size,” said Jenkins “By collaborating with experts on liquid cell-TEM, we can observe the chemical reactions and watch these 1D materials grow in real time.”

Filed Under: Artsci, Jenkins, News

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