La Comisión Académica del Programa de Doctorado en Química Avanzada organiza las IV Jornadas del Doctorado en Química Avanzada el día 30 de octubre de 2023.
Las jornadas constarán de tres conferencias plenarias impartidas por investigadores procedentes de universidades extranjeras y españolas de reconocido prestigio y presentaciones orales por parte de los estudiantes doctorado.
Entre estos investigadores se incluyen Davide Ballabio de la Università degli Studi di Milano Statale; Robert Pal de la Durham University, Juan Ángel Casares González de la Universidad de Valladolid y los investigadores de la Universidad de Burgos Luis Romay García y Javier Gómez Ayuso.
Las Jornadas se celebrarán en el salón de actos de la Facultad de Ciencias, a partir de las 9.30 h., y están dirigidas a toda la comunidad universitaria, especialmente al estudiantado de doctorado que desee completar su formación en investigación.
Las personas interesadas pueden inscribirse en el Formulario
Programa
9:30-10:30: Davide Ballabio, Università degli Studi di Milano Statale
“An introduction to classification for modelling chemical data”
10:30-11:30: Robert Pal, Durham University
“Recent advancements in CPL instrumentation: CPL laser scanning confocal microscopy and rapid handheld time-resolved CPL photography for life and material sciences”
11:30-11:45: Luis Romay García, Universidad de Burgos
“New screen-printed electrodes of silver: Development and applications”
11:45-12:00: Javier Gómez Ayuso, Universidad de Burgos
“Copper-Assisted Post- Ugi Domino Sequences in the synthesis of substituted lactams”
12:30-13:30: Juan Ángel Casares González, Universidad de Valladolid
“La reacción de transmetalación: Hacia la comprensión de sistemas catalíticos multimetálicos”
Davide Ballabio, Università degli Studi di Milano Statale
Davide Ballabio graduated in Environmental Sciences in 2002 and since then he has been working in chemometrics, analytical chemistry and Quantitative Structure Activity Relationship (QSAR). He is professor at the Milano Chemometrics and QSAR Research Group (Department of Earth and Environmental Science, University of Milano - Bicocca).
He is author of more than 70 peer reviewed papers and he has a continuative activity as referee for several international scientific journals. He has experience in multivariate data analysis (especially supervised classification) applied to both analytical and QSAR data; he also likes to code MATLAB toolboxes for the calculation of multivariate models and share them publicly.
Robert Pal, Durham University
Robert Pal grew up in Hungary and graduated from KLTE University of Debrecen, in 2004. Once completing his undergraduate studies he has moved to Durham to start a Ph.D with Professor David Parker on Responsive Luminescent Lanthanide systems. Completing his Ph.D in late 2007 he began to work as a Postdoctoral researcher within the Parker group, also working closely with Professor Andrew Beeby, moving away from organic chemistry towards bio-physical chemistry, spectroscopy and microscopy. In 2014 he has been awarded with a prestigious University Research Fellowship from the Royal Society to study the Development and Chemical Application of Phase Modulation Nanoscopy. Using a new generation of light activated cell type specific molecular nanomachines his group has demonstrated the use of molecular mechanical action to open cellular membranes and lipid bilayers and expedite cell death in a fully controlled manner. The efficacy of this method using single photon excitation in the UV domain was demonstrated and has been recently published in Nature (2017, 548, 567-572). He is also the Technical Director of a successful University spin out company, FScan Ltd, which has developed lanthanide technology to be used as part of a novel test for Prostate Cancer detection that is currently part of an ongoing clincial trial. He has also founded PB Spectroscopy limited alongside Prof. Andrew Beeby, a company that is dedicated for the development of miniaturised and affordable spectroscopic instrumentation and solutions.
Juan Ángel Casares González, Universidad de Valladolid
Juan A. Casares estudió química en la Universidad de Valladolid. Obtuvo su doctorado en el Colegio Universitario de Burgos (Universidad de Valladolid) en 1992, bajo la supervisión del Prof. Pablo Espinet, y en 1995 se mudó a ISSECC (CNR) en Florencia, Italia, para una estadía posdoctoral. En 1996 se unió a la Facultad de Ciencias de la Universidad de Valladolid, donde es profesor desde 1997 y profesor titular desde 2012. Sus estudios de investigación incluyen espectroscopía de RMN dinámica de complejos planos cuadrados y sobre catálisis de hidrogenación, sililformilación de alquinos, polimerización, y reacciones de acoplamiento cruzado. Actualmente su enfoque se basa en el estudio de los mecanismos de reacción del acoplamiento cruzado catalizado por cobre y paladio y el desarrollo de nuevos sistemas catalíticos multimetálicos.