Thanks to @SimonRondeau for hosting my visit to @ChemUWindsor. Had a great time meeting students and faculty there and sharing our work on porous polymers! Looking forward to continuing our collaboration.
This month's paper-of-the-month is Roald Hoffmann's "How Chemistry and Physics Meet in the Solid State." A must read for anyone in the field (or field-adjacent), and a prime example of how good writing and good science are inextricably linked.
https://t.co/66MELfos4v
Congratulations to Mengwen Yan and collaborators for a mechanistic study showing how the action of water and oxygen degrade 2D ZnSe! @aminterfaces https://t.co/ehZAEobukt
We are returning to Twitter! For starters, congratulations to Tianran Zhai, alumna Kelly Walter, and collaborators in the @SimonRondeau group on their work showing that main-chain metal ions can generate porosity in non-network polymers! https://t.co/g0dvZX9JUh
This month's paper-of-the-month is @jillianldempsey's Beginner's Guide to Cyclic Voltammetry (https://t.co/mDNqHFztwg). This is a fantastic resource and reference to anyone just getting into electrochemistry, and several of our group's students have benefited.
Second, we're highlighting a paper-of-the-month - a paper that Feldblyum group students found to be useful, creative, impactful, or just plain unexpected!
@NobuhiroYanai@ualbany Thanks so much for your fantastic presentation! We were delighted to have you, and hope to see you in person on this or that side of the Pacific Ocean soon!
Congratulations to Mengwen Yan and Sean Collins @SeanCollinsChem for a successful collaboration digging into the details of aerobic degradation of 2D layered hybrid materials! https://t.co/h9KI892KLW