The Ephraim and Wilma Shaw Roseman Seminar Series presents Professor Justin Caram

Remsen Hall 233

**CANCELLED - RESCHEDULED DATE AND TIME WILL BE ANNOUNCED SOON** Professor Justin Caram, University of California, Los Angeles "Exploring the extremes of excitonic photophysics" Abstract: We investigate the chemical physics that underpins “extreme” excitonic photophysics -- materials with infrared electronic absorption, long-range exciton delocalization/transport, unusually narrow linewidths, and quantum functionality.  In this talk, I will […]

Special Seminar

Remsen Hall 233

Dr. Ellen Matson, University of Rochester Charge Compensation and Transfer in Molecular Metal Oxides ABSTRACT: Atomistic understanding of charge transfer processes at redox active transition metal oxide surfaces are central to the development of large-scale energy storage and conversion technologies. Here, we describe our efforts in bridge the conceptual disconnect between molecular and solid-state cation-coupled […]

The Ephraim and Wilma Shaw Roseman Seminar Series presents Associate Professor Mark Wilson

Associate Professor Mark Wilson, University of Toronto “Advancing nanocrystal-sensitized, triplet-fusion upconversion (photochemistry)” The ability to efficiently up-convert broadband, low-intensity light would be an enabling technology for volumetric 3D printing, background-free biomedical imaging, and sensitizing silicon-based cameras to the short-wave infrared. Our approach uses colloidal quantum dots to absorb low-energy photons and sensitize the spin-triplet excitonic […]

The Ephraim and Wilma Shaw Roseman Seminar Series presents Professor Matthias Heyden

Remsen Hall 233

Professor Matthias Heyden, Arizona State University “Making Sense of the “Jiggling and Wiggling of Atoms” in Molecular Simulations” Vibrational spectroscopies at mid-infrared frequencies provide excellent probes to characterize functional groups and their immediate chemical environment. However, from a thermodynamic and dynamic point of view, only the ground state of these vibrations is significantly populated at […]

The Ephraim and Wilma Shaw Roseman Seminar Series presents Associate Professor Sarah Slavoff

Remsen Hall 233

Associate Professor Sarah Slavoff, Yale University "Dark Matter of the Human Proteome" Advanced methods in next-generation sequencing and proteogenomics have revealed thousands of previously invisible human protein-coding genes, increasing the known size of the human proteome by as much as 40%. This previously unannotated proteomic “dark matter” includes small open reading frames (smORFs) encoding polypeptides […]

Special Seminar

Remsen Hall 233

Dr. Grant E. Johnson, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory “Investigating Atomically-Precise Materials Prepared Using Ion Soft Landing” ABSTRACT: Scientific challenges that underlie efficient energy storage, chemical conversions and separations, and quantum computing may be addressed using unconventional mass spectrometry techniques that provide unprecedented molecular-level insight. Novel materials not obtainable through conventional synthesis methods may be prepared […]

The Ephraim and Wilma Shaw Roseman Seminar Series presents  Professor Matthew R. Golder

Remsen Hall 233

Professor Matthew R. Golder, University of Minnesota “Masquerading Soft Materials: Anomalous Behavior in Macromolecular Design” In the first half of this talk, the control of basic structural features in polymers, such as topology and chain conformation, will be discussed within the context of downstream physical properties. Sometimes these properties are unanticipated based on the chemical […]

The Ephraim and Wilma Shaw Roseman Seminar Series presents Michael Freeman

Remsen Hall 233

Professor Michael Freeman, University of Minnesota “Biosynthetic insights into α-N-methylated peptide natural products” Ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs) provide biosynthetic routes to peptide modifications not often observed in primary metabolism. We have recently discovered RiPP pathways that install peptide backbone α-N-methylations conferring therapeutically useful peptide properties including membrane permeability, increased target specificity, and […]

The Ephraim and Wilma Shaw Roseman Seminar Series presents Todd Hyste

Remsen Hall 233

Professor Todd Hyster, Cornell University “Photoenzymatic Catalysis - Using Light to Reveal New Enzyme Functions” Enzymes are exquisite catalysts for chemical synthesis, capable of providing unparalleled levels of chemo-, regio-, diastereo- and enantioselectivity. Unfortunately, biocatalysts are often limited to the reactivity patterns found in nature. In this talk, I will share my groups efforts to […]

The Ephraim and Wilma Shaw Roseman Seminar Series presents Phillip Milner

Remsen Hall 233

Professor Phillip Milner, Cornell University “Simplifying Synthesis at the Interface of Organic and Materials Chemistry” Porous framework materials, including metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), are highly tunable materials with myriad potential applications ranging from chemical separations to gas storage to catalysis. This is due to the unusual local environment offered by their pores. Herein we will discuss […]

The Ephraim and Wilma Shaw Roseman Seminar Series presents John Lukesh

Remsen Hall 233

Professor John Lukesh, Wake Forest University “New Investigative Tools for Probing the Chemical Biology of Reactive Sulfur Species” Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) has been historically dismissed as a highly toxic industrial and environmental pollutant. This limited viewpoint began to shift, however, in the mid 1990s when it was suggested that H2S may play a key role […]