报告题目:CoordinationProgramming of 1D and 2D Molecular Networks
报告人:Prof. Nishihara

Department of Chemistry, School of Science, TheUniversity of Tokyo
时 间:2015年10月29日(星期三)上午 9:00-11:00
地 点:独墅湖校区701楼--1228室
附 Hiroshi Nishihara教授简历:
Education:
1979-1982 TheUniversity of Tokyo, Graduate School of Science, Ph.D (D.Sc.) degrees
1977-1979 TheUniversity of Tokyo, Graduate School of Science, M. S. degree
1973-1977 TheUniversity of Tokyo, Undergraduate course, B. S. degree
Professional Appointments:
2010- 2012Visiting Professor, Institute of Molecular Science, Okazaki, Japan
2010- 2012Visiting Professor, Nagoya University, Japan
1996-present Professor, School ofScience, The University of Tokyo (Inorganic Chemistry)
1993-1996Researcher, PRESTO, Japan Science and Technology Corporation
1992-1996Associate Professor, Faculty of Science and Technology, Keio University
1990-1992Assistant Professor, Faculty of Science and Technology, Keio University
1987-1989VisitingResearch Associate, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
1982-1990Research Associate, Faculty of Science and Technology, Keio University
ProfessionalService: (Present) President-Elect of the Electrochemical Society of Japan(ESCJ), Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers, Editorial board, Dalton Transactions,Advisory board. Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry. Advisory board. Journalof Inorganic and Organometallic Polymers and Materials, Editorial board.Chemical Records, Editorial board.
(Past)Electrochemistry, Editorial board. Bulletin of the Chemical Society of Japan,Editorial board, Senior Editor. Chemistry Letters, Editorial board. Chemistryand Education (CSJ), Editor-in-Chief, etc. The 2008 Joint International Meetingof the Electrochemical Society and the Electrochemical Society of Japan,Honolulu, USA; Chairman of the Organizing committee of ECSJ. Member; Board ofThe Electrochemical Society of Japan. Member; Board of The Chemical Society ofJapan, Vice president of Japan Society of Coordination Chemistry, VicePresident of The Electrochemical Society of Japan (ECSJ), Vice President of theInternational Society of Electrochemistry (ISE), Vice President of the ChemicalSociety of Japan (CSJ).
Professional Recognition:
1994 YoungScholar’s Lectureship, The Chemical Society of Japan
2003 The ChemicalSociety of Japan Award for Creative Work
2005Professorship of University of Bordeaux I, France
2009Professorship of University of Strasbourg, France
2011 DocteurHonoris Causa from University of Bordeaux I
2014 Commendationfor Science and Technology by the Minister of Education, Culture, Sports,Science and Technology
2015 JapanSociety of Coordination Chemistry Award
Research Area:
Coordinationchemistry, organometallic chemistry, electrochemistry, photochemistry, andmaterial science
(Short CV)
Hiroshi Nishiharareceived his B. Sc. degree in 1977, M. Sc. in 1979 and D. Sc. in 1982 from TheUniversity of Tokyo. He was appointed research associate of Department ofChemistry, Faculty of Science and Technology at Keio University in 1982, and hewas promoted lecturer in 1990, and associate professor in 1992. Since 1996, hehas been a professor of Department of Chemistry, School of Science at TheUniversity of Tokyo, and presently, a Vice Dean of School of Science. He alsoworked as a visiting research associate in the Prof. Royce W. Murray’s group ofDepartment of Chemistry at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (1987-1989),and as a researcher of PRESTO, JRDC (1992-1996). He has received Professorshipof University of Bordeaux I (France) in 2005, that of University of Strasbourg(France) in 2009, and Distinguished Lectureship of Hong Kong Baptist Universityin 2012.
Over the pasttwenty decades he has successfully synthesized multi-functional materials,combined them with electrochemical systems, and conducted a theoreticalanalysis of electron transfer systems concerning the electron transfer chainsystem, all starting from the fabrication of redox polymer-modified electrodessuch as electropolymerized metallocene-coated electrodes and unidirectionalelectron flow, and redox bilayer diodes. Over the past ten years, he hasfocused on expanding the molecular functions, combining the redox and othermolecular functionalities, and fabricating molecular devices. The main researchachievements over this time have been the synthesis of new -conjugatedorganometallic polymers and the discovery of their photoconductivity andferromagnetic interaction, photochromic metal complexes in which the physicaland steric nature of the complexes interacts with photochromic moieties toyield a unique switching of redox, magnetic and luminescence properties, andproton-responsive donor–acceptor conjugated complexes that show valencetautomerization. Additional research results include the construction ofmolecular networks using the surface bottom-up coordination method andmechanistic studies on their electron transport behaviors, the synthesis ofelectro- and photo-functional metal nanoparticles and their surface assembly,the development of a photon-sensing device made of a combination ofcyanobacterial photosystem I complex, molecular wire, gold nanoparticles, and atransistor, and metal complex -nanosheets, which are redox active andelectronically conducting.
He received Young Scholar’s Lectureship,The Chemical Society of Japan in 1994, The Chemical Society of Japan Award forCreative Work in 2003, Docteur Honoris Causa from University of Bordeaux in2011, Commendation for Science and Technology by the Minister of Education,Culture, Sports, Science and Technology in 2014, and Japan Society of Coordination Chemistry Award in 2015. He was the leader of a Grant-in-Aid forScientific Research on Innovative Areas “The Coordination Programming –Scienceof Super-molecular Structure and Creation of Chemical Elements” (area abbr.:Coordination program) from 2009 to 2014.
(报告联系人:郎建平老师课题组)