Hosts:
Dr Giannis Zacharakis, IESL
Dr. Papamatheakis, IMBB
Time:
12:00
Description:
Maria ANDREADAKI
Siden-Kiamos' Lab
Title: "Exploring gametogenesis in malaria parasites".
Friday, March 6th 2015 @ 12:00
Seminar Room 1 [FORTH's bldg]
Time:
12:00
Description:
Georgia CHATZINIKOLAOU
Garinis’ Lab
Title: "Tagging NER in development and disease".
Friday, March 13th 2015 @ 12:00
Seminar Room 1 [FORTH's bldg]
Time:
12:00
Description:
Sifis PEDIADITAKIS
Gravanis' Lab
Title: "Molecular Pharmacology of small NGF receptor agonists".
Friday, March 20th 2015 @ 12:00
Seminar Room 1 [FORTH's bldg]
Time:
12:10
Description:
SPEAKER: Puru Jena
Distinguished Professor
Department of Physics
Virginia Commonwealth University
Richmond, VA
TITLE: "Beyond The Periodic Table of Elements: Role of Superatoms"
DATE: Friday 20th March 2015
TIME: 12:00
ROOM: Chemistry Seminar Room
Time:
16:00
Description:
Friday, March 20th, 2015
Speaker
Kiriaki Chrissopoulou
Affiliation
IESL-FORTH
Title
Structure and Dynamics in Polymer Nanocomposites
Location
Department of Physics Bldg., Voutes, 3rd floor Seminar Room
Time
16:00
Language
English
Abstract
Polymer materials are often filled with inorganics to improve their properties. The cases in which the additive exist in the form of a fine nm-sized dispersion within the polymeric matrix, thus producing a nanocomposite, allow the investigation of basic scientific problems. At the same time, these materials are utilized in a variety of applications. We have investigated the control of the structure in polymer-inorganic nanocomposites by understanding and/or altering the interactions between the chains and the surfaces. Further than the dispersion and the structure of the inorganic material within the nanohybrid, the polymer structure, morphology, crystallinity and chain conformation in the presence of the inorganic material and/or in the proximity of the surfaces is of equal importance. Different additives of varying size and geometry, as well as different compositions have been utilized to probe the effect of the interactions and of the confining length. Moreover, polymer dynamics close to surfaces or when chains are restricted in space can be very different from that in the bulk. We have investigated different polymer relaxation processes from the very local methyl rotation or the dielectrically active β and γ relaxations, to the phenyl flip and up to the segmental motion in the bulk and in the close proximity of an inorganic surface or under severe confinement. Polymers with different hydrophillicity, functional groups and/or different architectures as well as different inorganic additives have been utilized to investigate the influence of the interactions between the constituents and the geometry and size of the additive on the dynamics.
Time:
12:00 - 13:00
Location:
Seminar Room 1 [FORTH's bldg]
Description:
Giorgio PAPADOPOULOS
Strouboulisʼ Lab
Title: "Characterization of erythroid lineage specification by computational integration of genomic data".
Location
Department of Physics Bldg., Voutes, 3rd floor Seminar Room
Time
16:00
Language
English
Abstract
Chemical reactions are the result of successful collisions between reactants (atoms or molecules) of appropriate energy and orientation. Understanding the mechanism in its quantum detail means finding out what energies and orientations lead to reactive collisions at the atomic scale. That knowledge not only improves our understanding of chemical reactivity, but also provides additional levels of control on chemical reactions, opening the way for technological applications.
To obtain this information two experimental approaches are used. The first is measuring the energy and spatial orientation of quantum-state-selected reaction products, with velocity map & slice imaging being the state of the art techniques used. The second approach involves probing the structure of the reactants as they transform into products as a function of time (structural dynamics) with time-resolved X-ray or electron diffraction as the techniques of choice.
In this talk we will present the labs recent slice imaging work on the effects of weak bonding on photochemistry dynamics. We will also discuss the progress on a structural dynamics approach using time-resolved electron diffraction currently under development at FORTH.
Time:
12:00 - 13:00
Location:
Seminar Room 1 [FORTH's bldg]
Description:
Dimitris L. KONTOYIANNIS
Institute of Immunology
BSRC "Alexander FLEMING"
Title: "RNA: protein interactions as determinants of immune responses and chronic disease".