Laemont, A.; Abednatanzi, S.; Derakshandeh, P. G.; Verbruggen, F.; Fiset, E.; Qin, Q.; Van Daele, K.; Meledina, M.; Schmidt, J.; Oschatz, M.et al.; Van Der Voort, P.; Rabaey, K.; Antonietti, M.; Breugelmans, T.; Leus, K.: Covalent triazine framework/carbon nanotube hybrids enabling selective reduction of CO2 to CO at low overpotential. Green Chemistry 22 (10), pp. 3095 - 3103 (2020)
Perovic, M.; Qin, Q.; Oschatz, M.: From molecular precursors to nanoparticles—tailoring the adsorption properties of porous carbon materials by controlled chemical functionalization. Advanced Functional Materials 30 (41), 1908371 (2020)
Qin, Q.; Oschatz, M.: Overcoming chemical inertness under ambient conditions – a critical view on recent delopments in ammonia synthesis via electrochemical N2 reduction by asking five questions. ChemElectroChem 7 (4), pp. 878 - 889 (2020)
Sahoo, S. K.; Heske, J.; Antonietti, M.; Qin, Q.; Oschatz, M.; Kuehne, T. D.: Electrochemical N2 reduction to ammonia using single Au/Fe atoms supported on nitrogen doped porous carbon. ACS Applied Energy Materials 3 (10), pp. 10061 - 10069 (2020)
Qin, Q.; Heil, T.; Schmidt, J.; Schmallegger, M.; Gescheidt, G.; Antonietti, M.; Oschatz, M.: Electrochemical fixation of nitrogen and its coupling with biomass valorization with a strongly adsorbing and defect optimized boron-carbon-nitrogen catalyst. ACS Applied Energy Materials 2 (11), pp. 8359 - 8365 (2019)
Walczak, R.; Kurpil, B.; Savateev, A.; Heil, T.; Schmidt, J.; Qin, Q.; Antonietti, M.; Oschatz, M.: Template- and metal-free synthesis of nitrogen-rich nanoporous noble carbon materials by direct pyrolysis of a preorganized hexaazatriphenylene precursor. Angewandte Chemie International Edition 57 (33), pp. 10765 - 10770 (2018)
Oschatz, M.; Lama, S.; Perovic, M.; Qin, Q.; Harmanli, I.: The Role of Pore Architecture and Atomic Construction of Carbon Materials in Heterogeneous Catalysis. In Book of Abstracts, p. 18. IMPRS - Recharge Symposium : catalysis towards greener chemistry, Max Planck Institute of Coal Research, Mülheim, May 20, 2019 - May 23, 2019. (2019)
Qin, Q.: Chemical functionalization of porous carbon-based materials to enable novel modes for efficient electrochemical N2 fixation. Dissertation, 146 pp., Universität Potsdam, Potsdam (2019)
We left the lab coat hanging for a day—but brought our lab equipment with us to meet more than 8,200 visitors. At our 10 stations, we showcased how we learn from nature to develop sustainable solutions—from dye- and pigment-free colors to bio-inspired materials for construction, medicine, and design.
Challenge: It's not just whether a membrane is in a "solid" or "liquid" state that matters—how tightly its molecules are packed also influences how protein-rich droplets (condensates) stick to it Finding: More tightly packed membranes push away condensates, while loosely packed ones attract them Impact: Understanding these interactions is key to grasping essential cellular functions and disease progression
Supported by the EU’s Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions and the UK Guarantee Scheme, the 'Condensates at Membrane Scaffolds – Integrated Systems as Synthetic Cell Compartments’ doctoral network seeks 17 PhD candidates. This international and interdisciplinary program aims to train future biomedical and biotechnology researchers to explore cellular…
Scientists can now predict structural colors in bacteria. By sequencing a wide range of bacterial DNA and developing an accurate predictive model, reseachers uncovered how bacteria organize themselves into specific patterns within colonies to interfere with light and create iridescence.Their findings hold great promise for sustainable, pigment-free color production.
Imagine switching on a light and being able to understand and control the inner dynamics of a cell. This is what the Dimova group has achieved: by shining lights of different colors on replicates of cells, they altered the interactions between cellular elements. Controlling these complex interactions enables us to deliver specific drugs directly into the cells.
Little is known yet about the interaction between these biomolecular condensate droplets and the membrane-bound organelles. Researchers at the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces in Potsdam developed synthetic membraneless organelles and visualized what happens when they meet a membrane.
Prof Silvia Vignolini, Ph.D. is establishing the new Department "Sustainable and Bio-inspired Materials". She is working at the interface of physics, chemistry, biology and materials science and perfectly complements the institute's profile of research on chemistry, materials and sustainability.