- Department of Chemistry - http://umaine.edu/chemistry -

Inorganic

Posted By mbruce On December 2, 2009 @ 11:50 am In | Comments Disabled

Periodic Table #1 [1]

Inorganic Chemistry Research

Inorganic chemistry encompasses the entire periodic table with research from catalysis to alternative energy and from medicines to materials. Since inorganics are key today to environmental, energy, and nanomaterial research and the chemical industry, inorganic chemists find themselves at the forefront of research to identify the relationship between electronic structure and function: the fundamental issue of understanding properties at the molecular level.

Liquid-Crystal-2 [2]UMaine inorganic chemists are designing ways to detect mercury, copper and other contaminants in the environment, studying the bioinorganic chemistry of disulfides and thiolates with metals such as zinc and gold, investigating alternative energy, synthesizing liquid crystalline metal compounds, and probing the photophysical properties of gold and silver dicyanide compounds doped with alkali and lanthanide metals. These research projects span a wide array of instrumental techniques, calculations, and synthesis. We invite you to learn more about these projects from the faculty pages below.

Black Line

Contact Information Research
Alice_100_100 [3] Alice E. Bruce [3] 152 Aubert Hall
(207) 581-1168
abruce@maine.edu [4]
Inorganic [5]
Biological [6]
Environmental [7]
Chem Ed [8]
Mitchell.Bruce_100_100 [9] Mitchell Bruce [9]
277 Aubert Hall
(207) 581-1190
mbruce@maine.edu [10]
Inorganic [5]
Biological [6]
Environmental [7]
Alt. Energy [11]
Chem Ed [8]
hhp1 [12] Howard H. Patterson [13]
377 Aubert Hall
(207)-581-1178
howardp@maine.edu [14]
Inorganic [5]
Environmental [7]

Black Line


Article printed from Department of Chemistry: http://umaine.edu/chemistry

URL to article: http://umaine.edu/chemistry/home/faculty/inorganic/

URLs in this post:

[1] Image: http://umaine.edu/chemistry/files/2009/12/Periodic-Table-1.jpg

[2] Image: http://umaine.edu/chemistry/files/2009/12/Liquid-Crystal-2.jpg

[3] Image: http://umaine.edu/chemistry/faculty/abruce/

[4] abruce@maine.edu: mailto:abruce@maine.edu

[5] Inorganic: http://umaine.edu/chemistry/faculty/inorganic/

[6] Biological: http://umaine.edu/chemistry/faculty/biological/

[7] Environmental: http://umaine.edu/chemistry/faculty/environmental/

[8] Chem Ed: http://umaine.edu/chemistry/faculty/chemed/

[9] Image: http://umaine.edu/chemistry/faculty/mbruce/

[10] mbruce@maine.edu: mailto:mitchell.bruce@umit.maine.edu

[11] Alt. Energy: http://umaine.edu/chemistry/faculty/alternative-energy/

[12] Image: http://chemistry.umeche.maine.edu/patterson.html

[13] Howard H. Patterson: http://umaine.edu/chemistry/home/faculty/howard-h-patterson/

[14] howardp@maine.edu: mailto:howardp@maine.edu

Copyright © 2012 Department of Chemistry. All rights reserved.