Dmitry Baranov

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15 Posts
Curious chemist, tenure-track faculty in Chemical Physics at Lund University.
#nanocrystals #FluorescenceFriday
Websitehttps://www.dbaranov.com/
Lund is a beautiful and historic city that offers high quality living and excellent public services. Sweden is known for its liberal society, personal freedoms, and commitment to equality. LGBTQAI+ policies are progressive with widespread social acceptance. This inclusive environment allows individuals to express freely and without fear of persecution. All this contributes to making Sweden an excellent place to live and study.

Lund University is renowned for its cutting-edge research and proximity to state-of-the-art facilities (MAX IV and ESS). As a postdoctoral researcher you will have the opportunity for professional growth and original scientific contributions. At Nanochemistry and Spectroscopy group, we mainly focus on nanocrystal synthesis, self-assembly, and study of structure-property relationships. Here you can read more about the group and the Division: https://www.chemphys.lu.se/research/groups/baranov-group/

#Sweden #Research

Baranov Group | Division of Chemical Physics

Hi folks, we seek a post-doctoral researcher to study chemistry, spectroscopy, and the collective properties of metal halide perovskites. The position is supported by the European Innovation Council and will focus on the polarized photoluminescence of these materials. The researcher will be able to develop interdisciplinary expertise in nanochemistry, spectroscopy, and nanofabrication. Here is the link to the position description (apply by Aug 20): https://lu.varbi.com/en/what:job/jobID:743711/

#ScienceJobs

Post-doctoral fellow in nanochemistry and spectroscopy

Subject description Solution-processed nanomaterials, such as nanoparticles and mesocrystals, offer remarkable tunability of light-generating properties for various applications. Within this landscape

#Perovskite #nanocrystals taught us many interesting lessons over the past few years. One of them is a superlattice X-ray interference (multilayer diffraction).

In the recently published Accounts we discuss the origins and uses of that effect in the context of perovskites as well as other nanocrystal superlattices and colloidal layered materials.

“Collective Diffraction Effects in Perovskite Nanocrystal Superlattices”

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.accounts.2c00613

Fluorescent colors highlight depth and intricacy of MC Escher’s artwork. From an exhibit in Genova earlier this year. #fluorescencefriday
News in Nanocrystals isn’t on @Mastodon yet, so here is a flyer for the webinar next Wednesday. Professor Jungwon Park will be sharing fascinating science of seeing nanocrystal growth, nucleation, and transformations by in situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Register here: https://nincseminar.wixsite.com/news-in-nanocrystals
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News In Nanocrystals

Spectacular cation exchange visualization in this garnet poster by Lina Jakaitė.

https://linajakaite.gumroad.com/l/SSYxH

GARNET Poster (Digital)

It is FREE because I am a fan of a popular science and I support sharing knowledge. You can download these files for free, however work hours and other resources cost me while creating it, so I appreciate if you encourage me to create similar products in the future and support me by paying the price you think is fair. What you get:.png file, 1920x1920 px (6.4x6.4 in or 16.3x16.3 cm if 300 dpi used).png file, 5400x5400 px (18x18 in or 45.7x45.7 cm if 300 dpi used)Content of the illustrationThis picture is popularized and simplified illustration of the chemical relations within the garnet mineral family. It shows how the garnet end members relate to each other. Different garnet minerals are colored in their common colors and the mixture garnet names are not shown there. Please note that for professional studies another, more comprehensive mineralogy and geochemistry sources should be used. Garnet color variation is greater in nature.The frame structure represent the relations, not the mineral structure and it does not represent the relative mineral abundance in nature. LicenseThis work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 License. To view the copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/Basically it says that you are free to download these images and use them for any of your purpose (except commercial) as long as the author of these pictures is credited. Find me there:https://www.linkedin.com/in/linajakaitė/https://twitter.com/Strike_dip_comhttps://www.instagram.com/linajakaite/

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