Message from the Past Chair In this SPRING issue: Message from Division Past Chair Trenary From the Editors Division Officers Newly Elected ACS Fellows COLL Poster Sessions: Award Winners from the Dallas and San Francisco meetings ACS Award in Colloid and Surface Chemistry Arthur W. Adamson Award for Distinguished Service in the Advancement of Surface Chemistry Langmuir Lecturers Victor K. LaMer Award Unilever Award COLL Programming for Denver COLL Programming for Boston 2015 CSSS Upcoming CSSS Other upcoming conferences Free ACS programs for graduate students and postdocs A message from our Membership Secretary Dear Division Members, As 2014 Chair of the ACS Division of Colloid and Surface Chemistry, I am pleased to introduce this issue of our newsletter. Here you will find information on the current Division Officers and on events from recent ACS National Meetings and recent Colloid and Surface Science Symposia. I would like to thank William Ducker for his leadership in 2013. William helped smooth my transition to Chair and he continued to serve the Division with typical good cheer as Past Chair. I would also like to thank Howard Fairbrother for his dedicated service as Division Secretary, having served from 2005 to 2013. Howard has worked hard to pass on his intricate knowledge of divisional matters to Lorena Tribe, who is tackling her new job as Secretary with great enthusiasm. Robert Ofoli continued his tireless service to the division as newsletter editor, then passed the baton to Lorena Tribe; please send items for the next newsletter to [email protected]. The two ACS National Meetings in 2014 were in Dallas and in San Francisco. Highlights of those meetings were the Tuesday Award Symposia. In Dallas, lectures were given by Kenneth B. Eisenthal, Melissa A. Hines, and A. Paul Alivisatos, winners of the ACS Award in Colloid and Surface Chemistry, the Adamson Award for Surface Chemistry, and the ACS Award in Materials Chemistry, respectively. Starting this year, Colgate-Palmolive will be the sponsor of the Colloid and Surface Chemistry Award. The Adamson Award will lie fallow for 2015 and 2016, but we hope it will be offered again in 2017. In San Francisco, Langmuir Lectures, jointly sponsored by COLL and the journal Langmuir, were given by Anna C. Balazs and Helmuth Möhwald. They were followed by Ali Javey, winner of the Nano Letters Young Investigator Award, sponsored by the journal Nano Letters. Also in San Francisco, the Kavli Emerging Leader lecture was given by Ali Khademhosseini, who was nominated from COLL and was selected from among nominees from 11 ACS technical divisions. In June, the 88th Colloid and Surface Science Symposium was held at the University of Pennsylvania and featured lectures by Daeyeon Lee and Daniel J. Beltrán-Villegas, recipients of the Unilever and Victor K. LaMer Awards, respectively. Technical programming remains a core function of our division and organizing a symposium at a national meeting is great way to get involved. If you have an idea for a symposium, please contact Ramanathan Nagarajan (Nagu) (ramanathan.nagarajan.civ @mail.mil), our Program Chair. The San Francisco meeting was Nagu’s 25th as Program Chair, and we are all grateful to him for his many years of dedicated service. COLL and ACS can provide support in various ways for symposium organizers. Divisional open business meetings take place at the spring and fall ACS meetings immediately before the poster sessions. Information on various aspects of the division is available on our website (www.colloidssurfaces.org), and any requests for updates or additions to what is posted there can be sent to our webmaster, Eddy Tysoe ([email protected]). Sincerely, Mike Trenary, 2014 Chair ([email protected]) A note from your editors This edition of the newsletter contains some of the activities of the Division for 2014, along with the winners and pictures of the poster sessions from several national meetings. Due to some family issues, I was not able to compile either of the two issues planned for 2013. With Lorena Tribe offering to work with me on the 2014 issue, and taking over as Editor in 2015, we will hopefully be able to avoid such breaks in the future. Thank you all for your patience. If you have suggestions for future editions of the newsletter, please send them to Lorena ([email protected]). Look forward to a message from the Chair, Robert Hamers, and updates from the spring conference in our fall edition of the newsletter. Robert Ofoli Division Officers Below are the 2014 Division officers. More information on each officer can be found on the Division website, www.colloidssurfaces.org. Elected officers: Chair: Chair Elect: Vice Chair: Past Chair: Program Chair: Secretary: Treasurer: Councilors: Alternate Councilors: Membership Secretary: Member-at-Large: Appointed officers: Chair, Nominations Committee: MPPG Representative: Newsletter Editors: Regional Meetings Coordinator: Symposium Chair: Webmaster: Robert Hamers Daniel Schwartz Howard Fairbrother Mike Trenary Ramanathan Nagarajan Lorena Tribe (2014-2017) Sarah Larsen (2013-2015) Eric Furst (2014-2016), Tina Nenoff (2013-2015), Maria Santore (2015-2017), Robert Tilton (2013-2015) Gail Blaustein, John Russell, Steve Tait (2015-2017), Paul Shiller (2015-2017) Marina Ruths Eric Borguet (2013-2015), Robert Lockheed (2013-2015), Paschalis Alexandridis (2014-2016) Mike Trenary Paul Van Tassel Robert Ofoli (2014), Lorena Tribe (2015) Eric Borguet Michael Bevan Eddy Tysoe Newly-Elected ACS Fellows from the Division The ACS Fellows Program was created by the ACS Board of Directors in December 2008 “to recognize members of ACS for outstanding achievements in and contributions to Science, the Profession, and the Society.” Nominees must be current members in good standing with ACS, and selection is based on demonstrated excellence in two defined areas: (1) excellence in science/profession, and (2) outstanding service to ACS. The Executive Committee is pleased to announce that the following Division Members have been named to the 2014 class of ACS Fellows. The new fellows and their citations as found on the ACS website http://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/fundingand-awards/fellows/list-of-2014-acs-fellows.html#P179_13145 are given below. Dadyburjor, Dady catalyst deactivation by coking and sintering, and fuels/chemicals from coal and natural gas. Contribution to the ACS community: Served as Chair and held other offices in the Division of Petroleum Chemistry (now Energy and Fuels) and served as Director-at-Large of the Division of Energy and Fuels. West Virginia University Also served as a Governing Board member of the Contribution to the science/profession: Conducted Council for Chemical Research. research in catalysis and fuel production, including Emrick, Todd University of Massachusetts Amherst Contribution to the science/profession: Recognized for creative new syntheses of functional polymers, nanoparticles, and nanocomposite materials. Contribution to the ACS community: Provided dedicated service and leadership in the Polymeric Materials: Science and Engineering Division and to the broader materials chemistry community. Furst, Eric M. matter science, including research that has advanced the areas of colloidal self- and directed-assembly, microrheology, and interfacial phenomena. Contribution to the ACS community: Served as Chair of the ACS Colloid & Surface Science Symposium, as an Executive Committee member of the Division of University of Delaware Contribution to the science/profession: Recognized for scholarship and education in colloid and soft Colloid and Surface Chemistry, and currently as a Councilor of the Division. Levinger, Nancy E. interfaces and in confined environments, and for development of undergraduate research opportunities. Contribution to the ACS community: Recognized for commitment as a Division of Physical Chemistry Executive Officer, especially as Program Chair; as a Colorado State University Contribution to the science/profession: Recognized for pioneering work on spectroscopy and dynamics in mentor and panelist in the Postdoc to Faculty Workshop program; and to equity in national awards. condensed phases, especially molecules at liquid Richards, Ryan M. Provided fundamental understanding of nanoscale materials and their application in green and renewable energy technologies. Contribution to the ACS community: Served as Chair of the Nanoscience Subdivision of the Division of Inorganic Chemistry; Colorado Local Section Chair; Colorado School of Mines Renewable Energy Laboratory and National Contribution to the science/profession: Contributed to the areas of nanoparticle preparations, in situ spectroscopy, porous materials, and catalysis. Schwartz, Daniel K. Co-Organizer and Program Chair of the Rocky Mountain Regional Meeting; and Co-Organizer of the ACS Summer School on Green Chemistry and Sustainable Energy. Organized nanoscience programming for National Meetings. single-molecule tracking, to advance the fundamental understanding of the interfacial dynamics and selfassembly of surfactants and biomolecules. Contribution to the ACS community: Recognized for leadership in the Division of Colloid and Surface Chemistry, service as a Senior Editor of Langmuir, and University of Colorado Boulder Contribution to the science/profession: Developed and applied advanced microscopy methods, including ACS symposium organization. Stine, Keith J. nanoporous gold as a material for analytical applications and for supported synthesis. Contribution to the ACS community: Impacted students through career presentations, chemical demonstration shows, science outreach fairs, Project SEED, and encouragement of a Younger Chemists University of Missouri–Saint Louis Contribution to the science/profession: Important Committee in the St. Louis Local Section. contributions include recent work to develop Willson, Richard C. level, and developed novel applications in separations and diagnostics. Developed widely used methods for high-throughput screening of catalysts and affinity separations ligands. Contribution to the ACS community: Led the Division of Biochemical Technology and served as University of Houston Contribution to the science/profession: Characterized biomolecular recognition and chromatography at the fundamental Xia, Younan Program Co-Chair, Area Coordinator, Webmaster, Awards Organizer, and as a Councilor. Also led the International Society for Molecular Recognition. many important new forms of nanocrystals and the mechanistic understanding and elegant experimental control of their chemical syntheses. Contribution to the ACS community: Recognized for serving as an Associate Editor of Nano Letters since 2002 and on the Advisory Boards of many chemistry Georgia Institute of Technology Contribution to the science/profession: Recognized for groundbreaking contributions to the invention of . journals. Poster Award Winners During each COLL poster session, professional members of the Division select the best posters by graduate and undergraduate students. Each winner is presented with a $250 award during the COLL Division luncheon. The award winners for Dallas (Spring 2014), and San Francisco (Fall 2014) are listed below. Dallas Award Winners Andrea d’Aquino, Western Washington University Becca Putans, University of Wisconsin Madison Ellen Robertson, University of Oregon Jessica Spear, Texas A&M University Hannah Wayment-Steele, Pomona College San Francisco Award Winners From left to right: David Renard, University of Michigan - Dearborn Sabrina Menhase, Technische Universitat Darmstodt Michael Trenary, Chair Jennifer Logie, University of Toronto Tobias Kaposi, Technical University Munich The 2014 ACS Award in Colloid and Surface Chemistry Kenneth B. Eisenthal, Columbia University Professor Kenneth B. Eisenthal, PhD. is the Mark Hyman Professor of Chemistry at Columbia University. After his undergraduate work at Brooklyn College, he obtained an MA in Physics and a Ph.D. in Chemical Physics from Harvard University, the latter with Marshall Fixman. Prof. Eisenthal carried out research with Bill McMillan as a postdoc funded by NIH and then advanced his knowledge of molecular spectroscopy with Mostafa El-Sayed at UCLA. After some time with Aerospace Corporation followed by work at the chemical physics group at the IBM Almaden (then in San Jose) Research Division Laboratory, Prof. Eisenthal started his research group at Columbia University. He was awarded the 2014 ACS Award in Colloid and Surface Chemistry for pioneering the development and application of nonlinear optical methods and for carrying out the first experiments on equilibrium and ultrafast processes at liquid and colloid interfaces. Sources: Biography of Kenneth B. Eisenthal, The Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 111 (25) 8699-8702 (2007) and http://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/funding-and-awards/awards/national/recipients/2014-recipient-citations.html The 2014 Arthur W. Adamson Award for Distinguished Service in the Advancement of Surface Chemistry Melissa A. Hines, Cornell University (left) and Michael Trenary, Chair (right). Prof. Melissa A. Hines, PhD. is a Professor at the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York. She was a chemistry undergraduate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, where she did research with Sylvia Ceyer. Prof. Hines went on to get a PhD in chemistry at Stanford University. Her subsequent postdoc at Bell Labs in Murray Hill, New Jersey, allowed her to develop her interest in and understanding of material science. Her appreciation of applied research combined with her zeal for basic science were manifest in her position as Director of the Center for Material Research at Cornell. Prof. Hines received the 2014 Arthur W. Adamson Award for Distinguished Service in the Advancement of Surface Chemistry for her fundamental delineation of the mechanism of sitespecific silicon etching reactions, and the surface chemical control of mechanical properties of silicon. Sources: http://chemistry.cornell.edu/faculty/detail.cfm?netid=mah11 and http://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/fundingand-awards/awards/national/recipients/2014-recipient-citations.html The 2014 Langmuir Lecturers Since 1979, the Colloid and Surface Chemistry Division (COLL) has presented the Langmuir Lecturer Award to two outstanding researchers at the Fall ACS Meeting. Since 2010, the lectures have been co-sponsored by the COLL Division and the ACS journal Langmuir. The 2014 Langmuir Lecturers are Anna C. Balazs and Helmuth Möhwald. The excerpts below were extracted from the award announcements, which are available at http://pubs.acs.org/page/langd5/2014/lecture.html. A list of previous Langmuir lecturers is also available at http://colloidssurfaces.org/awards/langmuir.php. Anna C. Balazs : Dr. Anna Balazs is a Distinguished Professor of Chemical Engineering and the Robert v. d. Luft Professor, Department of Chemical & Petroleum Engineering, University of Pittsburgh. She also serves as an Adjunct Professor in Pitt’s Department of Chemistry. Dr. Balazs received a MS from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and went on to earn her PhD from the same university. Her postdoctoral research was completed at Brandeis University, MIT, and the University of Massachusetts. She has also held the position of visiting professor at the Scripps Research Institute in Southern California, the University of Texas at Austin, and Oxford University in the United Kingdom. The research interests of Dr. Balazs center on statistical, mechanical, and computer modeling of complex chemical systems and developing theories for the properties of polymer blends and the behavior of polymers at surfaces and interfaces. The title of Dr. Balazs’s lecture was “Designing biomimetic capsules and gels that undergo directed movement.” Sources: http://pubs.acs.org/page/langd5/2014/lecture.html and http://www.mirm.pitt.edu/people/bios/Balazs1.asp Helmuth Möhwald: Since his retirement in February 2014 Prof. Dr. Helmuth Möhwald directs the emeritus working group "Interfaces" at the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces. Originally from Goldenöls (Czechoslovakia), Prof. Möhwald earned his degree in physics from Göttingen University, and a PhD at the Max Planck Institute of Biophysical Chemistry/Göttingen. He was a postdoc at IBM San Jose and then went on to get a German Habilitation in physics at Ulm University. He has been a scientific staff member at Dornier/Friedrichshafen, an Associate Professor of Experimental Physics (Biophysics) at TU Munich and of Physical Chemistry at Mainz University. He is the Director and a Scientific Member at the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces (since 1993) and an Honorary Professor at Potsdam University (since 1995). The title of Prof. Möhwald’s lecture was “From Langmuir monolayers to layer by layer assembly”. Sources: http://pubs.acs.org/page/langd5/2014/lecture.html and http://www.mpg.de/389979/kolloid_grenzflaechen_wissM2 2014 Victor K. LaMer Award The Victor K. LaMer Award is presented each year to the top Ph.D. thesis in the field of colloid and interfacial science in the United States and Canada. The winner receives $3,000 and the opportunity to present his/her work at the summer ACS Colloid and Surface Science Symposium. Dr. Daniel J. Beltrán-Villegas received his Ph.D. in 2012 in Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the Johns Hopkins University with Michael A. Bevan, and is currently a postdoctoral fellow in Chemical Engineering at the University of Michigan with Ronald Larson. His research interests revolve around techniques for measuring colloidal particle conservative and dissipative forces and modeling of dynamic assembly processes. He was the second place awardee in the Langmuir Student Award competition held during the 86th Colloids and Surface Science Symposium. His Ph.D. research accomplishments include 14 publications in Langmuir, the Journal of Chemical Physics and Soft Matter. 2014 Unilever Award Dr. Daeyeon Lee, Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering and Biomolecular Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania is the recipient of the 2014 Unilever Award for Outstanding Young Investigators in Colloid and Surfactant science. Daeyeon received his Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from MIT in 2007 under Professors R.E. Cohen and M.F. Rubner. Prior to joining the University of Pennsylvania in 2009, Daeyeon was a post-doctoral fellow at Harvard University with David A. Weitz. Daeyeon has won several awards and recognitions, including the 2010 Victor K LaMer Award and the NSF Career Award in 2011. Daeyeon’s Unilever award is in recognition of his outstanding work that merges two important types of materials – surfactants and colloids; i.e., Janus particles. The fact that Janus particles can be synthesized now in large quantities and that their behavior emulates the properties and funtionality of molecular surfactants is both fundamentally and practically important. The 2014 Kavli Emerging Leader Award Dr. Ali Khademhosseini, Associate Professor at Harvard-MIT's Division of Health Sciences and Technology (HST), Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) and Harvard Medical School (HMS), as well as an Associate Faculty at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired engineering. He received his Ph.D. in bioengineering from MIT (2005), and MASc (2001) and BASc (1999) degrees from University of Toronto both in chemical engineering. His research is based on developing micro- and nanoscale technologies to control cellular behavior with particular emphasis in developing microscale biomaterials and engineering systems for tissue engineering. Dr. Khademhosseini’s interdisciplinary research has been recognized by over 30 major national and international awards. He is also the recipient of the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE), the highest honor given by the US government for early career investigators. Sources: http://www3.aiche.org/speakerscorner/speaker.aspx?ID=1a9a3ce6-2f8d-4b53-ab4c-b7050e3479c7, http://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/meetings/fall-2014/program/kavli-lecture-series.html, and http://www.tissueeng.net/lab/peopleDetail.php?id=424 COLL Programming for the Denver ACS Meeting 249th ACS National Meeting & Exposition, March 22-26, 2015, Denver, CO ACS Meeting Theme: Chemistry of Natural Resources Symposium Organizer Symposium Title Matthew Tirrell, Institute for Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637; Tel: 773-834-2001; Fax: 773-8347756; Cell: 773-569-9495; E-mail: [email protected] Honggang Cui, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218 Tel: 410-516-6878; Fax: 410-516-7710; Cell: 302-562-3216; Email: [email protected] Molecular Engineering of Peptide Assembly Aditya (Ashi) Savara, Bldg 4100, MS 6201, RM A205, Chemical Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Lab, 1 Bethel Valley Road, Oak Ridge, TN 37831 USA; 865-576-6311; [email protected]; Elucidation of Mechanisms Kinetics on Surfaces Subra Muralidharan and Narayanan Srividya, School of Molecular Biosciences, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164. [email protected]; [email protected] Atul N. Parikh, Department of Biomedical Engineering and Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA 95616; (530)-304-7523; Fax: 530752-2444; [email protected] Mu-ping Nieh, [email protected] Biomembrane synthesis, structure, mechanics, and dynamics Ramanathan Nagarajan (NAGU), Molecular Sciences and Engineering Team, Natick Soldier Research, Development & Engineering Center, Kansas Street, Natick MA 01760; 508-2336445; [email protected] Basic Research in Colloids, Surfactants and Nanomaterials Wolfgang Parak, Biophotonics Group, University of Marburg, D35037 Marburg, Germany, and Biofunctional Materials Laboratory, CIC biomaGUNE, Paseo de Miramón 182, 20009 Donostia – San Sebastián, Spain. Tel: 49‐ 6421 28-24161. Email: [email protected] Luis M. Liz-Marzán, Bionanoplasmonics Laboratory, CIC biomaGUNE, Paseo de Miramón 182, 20009 Donostia – San Sebastián, Spain. Tel: 34‐943-005-300. Email: [email protected] Functionalization Nanosurfaces Jingbo L. Liu, Department of Chemistry, Texas A&M UniversityKingsville, USA. Tel: 1‐361-593-2914. Email: [email protected] or [email protected] Sajid Bashir, Department of Chemistry, Texas A&M UniversityKingsville, USA. Tel: 1‐361-593-4253. Email: [email protected] Natural Resource Capture, Storage and Energy Conversion Shanlin Pan, Department of Chemistry, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, 35478, Tel: (205) 348‐6381; Fax: (205)348‐9104; E‐mail: [email protected] Jie Zhen, Department of Chemistry, University of Texas in Dallas, USA. Tel: 1-972-883-5768. Email: [email protected] Metallic Nanostructures for Optical and Electrochemical Sensing and Alternative Energy Conversion of and Complex Mark Kastantin, Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, University of Colorado Boulder, USA. Tel: 1-303492-1629. Email: [email protected] Bruce Bowler, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Montana, USA. Tel: 1-406-243-6114. Email: [email protected] J.B. Alexander (Sandy) Ross, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Montana, USA. Tel: 1-406-243-6026. Email: [email protected] Interfacial Biomolecular Recognition Joelle Frechette, Dept. of Chemical & Biomolec. Engr., Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, MD 21218, ph: 410.516.0113, [email protected] Michael A. Bevan, Dept. of Chemical & Biomolec. Engr. Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, MD 21218, ph: 410.516.7907, [email protected] Particles at Fluid Interfaces Johns email: Johns email: Eric Borguet, Department of Chemistry, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA 19122; Ph: (215) 204-9696;Fax:(215) 2049530; [email protected] Christopher Matranga, Molecular Science Division, National Energy Technology Laboratory, US Dept of Energy, 626 Cochrans Mill Road, Pittsburgh PA 15236; 412 386 4114; [email protected] Plasmonic Catalysis and Sensing Robert Y. Lochhead, The School of Polymers & High Performance Materials, The University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg MS 39406; (601) 266 5945; [email protected] Advances in Formulations Science and Technology Ramanathan Nagarajan (NAGU), Molecular Sciences and Engineering Team, Natick Soldier Research, Development & Engineering Center, Kansas Street, Natick MA 01760; 508-2336445; [email protected] ACS Award Lectures (Invited) Ramanathan Nagarajan (NAGU), Molecular Sciences and Engineering Team, Natick Soldier Research, Development & Engineering Center, Kansas Street, Natick MA 01760; 508-2336445; [email protected] Symposium in honor of Paul S. Weiss – Recipient of ACS Award in Colloid and Surface Chemistry (Invited) Ramanathan Nagarajan (NAGU), Molecular Sciences and Engineering Team, Natick Soldier Research, Development & Engineering Center, Kansas Street, Natick MA 01760; 508-2336445; [email protected] Fundamental Research in Colloids, Surfaces and Nanomaterials (POSTER SESSION) Cosponsored Symposia (Primary Sponsor Indicated) Sara E. Mason, Department of Chemistry, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242; Ph: 319-335-2761; [email protected] Anastasia Ilgen, Geochemistry Department, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico; Tel: (505) 284-1393 [email protected] Sang Soo Lee (PNNL). Molecular scale processes controlling the reactivity at the mineral-water Interfaces (GEOC) Hind A. Al-Abadleh, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, ON N2L 3C5 CANADA; [email protected] Chemical Processes at Environmental Interfaces (ENVR) COLL Programming for Boston ACS Meeting 250th ACS National Meeting & Exposition, August 16-20, 2015, Boston, MA ACS Meeting Theme: A History of Innovation: From Discovery to Application Program Chair: Ramanathan Nagarajan Deadline for abstracts submission online: March 30, 2015 Submit abstracts at: http://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/meetings/boston---fall-2015.html Symposium Organizer Suzanne Balko, Biofunctional Polymer Materials, Leibniz-Institut für Polymerforschung, Dresden e.V., P. O. Box 120 411, D- 01005 Dresden, Germany; +49 (0)351 4658 633; Fax +49 (0)351 4658 533; [email protected] Torsten Kreer, Theory of Polymers, Leibniz-Institut für Polymerforschung, Dresden e.V., P. O. Box 120 411, D-01005 Dresden, Germany; +49 (0)351 4658 657; Fax +49 (0)351 4658 752; [email protected] Dmitri Kilin, Department of Chemistry, University of South Dakota, Vermillion, SD 57069. 605-677-7283; Fax: 605-677- 6397; [email protected] Mu-Ping Nieh, Department of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, Institute of Materials Science, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269; 860-486-8708; [email protected] John Katsaras (at ORNL); [email protected] Ramanathan Nagarajan (NAGU), Molecular Sciences and Engineering Team, Natick Soldier Research, Development & Engineering Center, Kansas Street, Natick MA 01760; 508- 233-6445; [email protected] Meenakshi Dutt, Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, Rutgers The State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, NJ 08854; [email protected] Yaroslava Yingling, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695; [email protected] Prakash R. Rai, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Massachusetts, Lowell, MA 01854; 978-934-4971; [email protected] Stephanie A. Morris, Program Manager, Office of Cancer Nanotechnology Research, Center for Strategic Scientific Initiatives, National Cancer Institute/NIH, Bethesda, MD, 20892; (301)-594-6876; [email protected] Ramanathan Nagarajan (NAGU), Molecular Sciences and Engineering Team, Natick Soldier Research, Development & Engineering Center, Kansas Street, Natick MA 01760; 508- 233-6445; [email protected] Christopher J. Karwacki, Protection and Decontamination Sciences Division, U. S. Army, Edgewood Chemical Biological Center, Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD 21010; 410-436-5704; [email protected] John N. Russell, Jr., Surface Chemistry Branch, Chemistry Division, Naval Research Laboratory, Washington DC 20375; 202-767-5879; [email protected] Helmuth Möhwald, Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces, 14476 Potsdam-Golm, Germany; +49 331 567-9201; Fax: +49 331 567-9202; [email protected] Amy Peterson, Department of Chemical Symposium Title Colloid-Polymer Architectures and Mixtures Experimental and computational approached to reactions at the surface of colloidal nano materials, facilitated by photo excitation and charge transfer Metrology of characterization, simulation and theory of biomembranes Basic Research in Colloids, Surfactants and Nanomaterials Theory and Modeling of nanoparticles interactions with biomolecules and polymers Nanotheranostics for Cancer Applications Nanomaterials for Defense and Homeland Security Applications Operando Spectroscopic Approach to Quantifying Structure-Activity Relationships of Real Catalysts under Ambient Conditions Surface Modification to Control Cell/Surface Interactions Engineering, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, MA 01609; 508-8316029; Fax: 508-831-5853; [email protected] Tao Ye, Chemistry and Chemical Biology, School of Natural Sciences, University of California, Merced, California 95343; 209-228-4094; [email protected] Gang-Yi Liu, Department of Chemistry, UC Davis, Davis, CA 95616, [email protected] David Britt, Department of Biological Engineering, Utah State University; 435797-2158; [email protected] Richard M. Crooks, Department of Chemistry The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX; 512-475-8674; [email protected] Francoise M. Winnik, Universite de Montreal, Faculte de Pharmacie et Departement de Chimie, Montreal QC H3C 3J7 Canada; 1 514 340 5179; [email protected] Bhanu P. S. Chauhan, Department of Chemistry, William Paterson University, Wayne, New Jersey 07470; 973-720-2470; Fax: 973-720-2972; [email protected] Ramanathan Nagarajan (NAGU), Molecular Sciences and Engineering Team, Natick Soldier Research, Development & Engineering Center, Kansas Street, Natick MA 01760; 508- 233-6445; [email protected] Ramanathan Nagarajan (NAGU), Molecular Sciences and Engineering Team, Natick Soldier Research, Development & Engineering Center, Kansas Street, Natick MA 01760; 508- 233-6445; [email protected] Biochemical ligands at interfaces: from molecular scale characterization to devices Nanoparticles in food, agricultural, and environmental settings Thirty Years of Langmuir Polymer and Biopolymer Based Nanomaterials-Oral Langmuir Lectures, NanoLetters Award Lecture, ACS Materials and Interfaces Award Lecture (Invited) Fundamental Research in Colloids, Surfaces and Nanomaterials (POSTER SESSION) Future ACS National Meetings and Themes 251st ACS National Meeting & Exposition, March 13 - 17, 2016, San Diego, CA Meeting Theme: Computers in Chemistry; 252nd ACS National Meeting & Exposition, August 21 - 25, 2016, Philadelphia, PA Meeting Theme: Chemistry of the People, by the People and for the People [Tentative]; 253rd ACS National Meeting & Exposition, April 2-6, 2017, San Francisco, CA Meeting Theme: Undecided The American Chemical Society Division of Colloid and Surface Chemistry (COLL) invites you to organize a symposium on any theme relevant to colloids, surfaces and nanomaterials, at one of the future ACS national meetings. If you want to organize a symposium, please e-mail a short proposal to the COLL Program Chair: Dr. Ramanathan Nagarajan (NAGU) Molecular Sciences and Engineering Team Natick Soldier Research, Development & Engineering Center 15 Kansas Street, Natick MA 01760 Ph: 508-233-6445; Fax: 508-233-4469 E-mail: [email protected] The Program Committee of the Division will act quickly to decide on the suitability of the symposium and the best meeting to schedule it. The proposal should contain the following information (see a sample below): Tentative title of the symposium Proposed organizers, with complete contact information (Inclusion of at least two organizers is recommended) Proposed national meeting to schedule the symposium (Select from the list of future meetings below) Number of half-day sessions planned (Each half-day session is approximately 210 min long and can accommodate 7 to 10 papers depending upon the time duration assigned for the talks. The default time is 20 min for a talk). Brief outline of the symposium including a listing of topics that would be covered List of possible speakers (Include at least 20 names to ensure that a three-session symposium will be possible. Keep in mind that there will also be unsolicited contributions). The 2015 Colloid and Surface Science Symposium (CSSS) The 89th ACS Colloid and Surface Science Symposium will take place at Carnegie Mellon University from June 15-17, 2015. For more information go to www.colloids2015.org. For additional information, contact the coChairs: Steve Garoff ([email protected]), Jim Schneider ([email protected]) or Bob Tilton ([email protected]). Upcoming CSSS meetings 2016: Harvard University 2017: City College of New York 2018: Pennsylvania State University Other Conferences of interest Pacifichem 2015 December 15 - 20, 2015. Attend Pacifichem 2015 as a presenter of cutting-edge research! Submit a paper during the Call for Abstracts, January 1 – April 5, 2015. http://www.pacifichem.org/ Safety and Sustainability of Nanotechnology (Symposium #404) Deadline April 3, 2015 www.pacifichem.org/symposiadesc2015/c_symp_404.htm . Contacts: Yi Zuo, James Ferri, Joachim Loo, Chunying Chen, Steve Mylon, Sijin Liu. GRC on Physics and Chemistry of Microfluidics May 31 - June 5, 2015, Mount Snow Resort in West Dover, VT. We have an exciting program planned and we hope you will consider attending. Follow this link to apply: http://www.grc.org/programs.aspx?id=13021 Applications received BEFORE March 15, 2015 will be eligible for partial scholarship/award funding. Contact: Shelley L. Anna. 5th International Colloids Conference June 21-24, 2015, Amsterdam, The Netherlands http://www.colloidsconference.com/ 2nd International Conference on Bioinspired and Zwitterionic Materials August 13-14, 2015, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA http://icbzm2015.com Contact: Shaoyi Jiang. Free ACS programs for graduate and postdoctoral students For information on opportunities for graduate students and postdocs, including the ACS Preparing for Life After Graduate School Workshop www.acs.org/gradworkshop, please contact [email protected] or visit www.acs.org/grad. A message from our Membership Secretary I would like to invite you to become a member of the Division of Colloid and Surface Chemistry (COLL) of the ACS. If you are already a COLL Division member, I would like to request that you encourage your coauthors and coworkers to become members of the Division. Why join the Division? The Division of Colloid and Surface Chemistry (COLL) is one of the most active Divisions in the American Chemical Society with approximately 2500 members throughout the world. Scientists like yourself join the Division to benefit professionally from the exchange of scientific information between its members. Attendance and presentations at the Division’s conference symposia provide excellent opportunities for professional networking and for enhanced visibility of your research. Every year, nearly 2000 research presentations are made in the COLL Division at the two ACS National Meetings and the unique summer symposium of the COLL Division. As a Division member, you can also volunteer to organize a thematic technical symposium on a topic of your interest at the ACS National Meetings. The field of Colloid and Surface Chemistry is highly interdisciplinary. This is reflected in the background of the Division’s members, who come from a variety of fields such as physical chemistry, nanoscience, materials science, biochemistry, electrochemistry, tribology, environmental science, nanomedicine and chemical engineering. The COLL Division also has a strong international participation. To learn more about our activities, fellowships, and awards, visit our webpage at http://colloidssurfaces.org/ . To join the Division, go to http://portal.acs.org/portal/acs/corg/content . If you are not an ACS member, first join the ACS. If you are an ACS member, log in and then select “Membership & Networks”, “Technical Divisions” and “Join a Division”. On the application form, fill in the code 509 for the COLL division. The Division Membership Fees are: $15 (ACS member), $16 (ACS non-member, COLL affiliate), or $5 (ACS student member) Sincerely, Marina Ruths Membership Secretary of the ACS COLL Division
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