Prof. SS Krishnamurthy , Professor Emeritus, Inorganic and Physical Chemistry Unit, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore will deliver a lecture, under Distinguished Lecture Series, on 18th November 2011. The following were the details:
Day: November 18th, Friday
Title: Journey into the calixarene land with the Torch of Phosphorus Venue: Outreach Auditorium
Time: 4:30 pm
Prof. Gautam Desiraju, Solid State and Structural Chemistry Unit, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, delivered a lecture, under C.N.R.Rao Lecture Series, on 25th February 2010. The following were the details:
Day: February 25th, Thursday
Title: Chemistry in the Middle Kingdom.
Venue: Outreach Auditorium
Time: 4:30 pm
Prof. V. Chandrasekhar, Department of Chemistry,
Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, delivered a lecture, under C.N.R.Rao Lecture Series, on 27th February 2009. The following are the details:
Day: February 27th, Friday
Title: Single Molecule Magnets.
Venue: L1 Lecture Hall Complex
Time: 6.00 pm
Prof. P. Balaram, Director,
Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, delivered a lecture, under
the Distinguished Lecture Series, on 7th November. The following are the details:
Day: Nov 7th, Friday
Title: PROBING CONUS VENOM PEPTIDE LIBRARIES BY MASS SPECTROMETRY.
Venue: Outreach Auditorium
Time: 12.00 noon
Title: " Soft Chemistry Routes to Nanomaterials "
Speaker: Prof. C N R Rao, FRS, Linus Pauling
Research Professor & Honorary President Jawaharlal Nehru
Centre for Advanced Scientific Research Jakkur, Bangalore
Abstract
Chemistry has played a major role in the
synthesis and assembly of nanostructures. Thus, nanocrystals
of metals, semiconducting chalcogenides and oxides of varying
shapes and dimensions have been prepared by employing single-source
precursors, solvothermal conditions and other soft chemical
routes. A specially interesting innovation is the synthesis
of ultrathin nanocrystalline films at the liquid-liquid interface.
Nanowires of a variety of exotic inorganic materials have
been synthesized recently, and many of them have required
the use of ingeneous chemistry. It is noteworthy that nanowires
of metals, chalcogenides, nitrides and oxides have all been
obtained by soft chemical methods, as distinct from the well-known
VLS, VS and template methods. In the case of nanotubes, the
story is even more interesting. Chemical routes have been
successful in the synthesis of carbon nanotubes, including
Y-junction nanotubes, but equally importantly, new classes
of inorganic nanotubes have been discovered in the last 3-4
years. These include nanotubes of metal chalcogenides, oxides
and nitrides. Soft chemistry has been useful in the synthesis
of nanotubes of inorganic materials such as oxides and sulfates.
In this presentation, an overview of the design, synthesis
and characterization of novel nanostructures will be provided,
based on the work carried out in Bangalore.
Date: November 25, 2005 . << Photogallery
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