澳门六合彩官方网站

澳门六合彩官方网站 chemistry professor published in POLYMER

March 8, 2017
澳门六合彩官方网站's Aimee Tomlinson co-authored research on organic photovoltaic devices.

Article By: Staff

Dr. Aimee Tomlinson, associate professor of chemistry at the University of North Georgia (澳门六合彩官方网站), has published a research paper in Polymer, the International Journal for the Science and Technology of Polymers.

The journal publishes original research on all areas of polymer science and technology with emphasis on molecular or intermediate-scale interpretations of data.

The published paper focuses on organic photovoltaic (OPV) devices, which are very similar to current solar cells, but removes many of the expensive metals from the device, and therefore makes them much cheaper.

"Our research was meant to see how changing out a single atom in a polymer sub-unit would impact the material’s performance in a solar cell.  In the end, we wanted to know how the nitrogen version of a well-known polymer would fare in a solar cell," said Tomlinson. 

Tomlinson’s co-authors are Benjamin J. Hale, Malika Jefferies-EL, Jon Stoffer, Moneim Elshobaki, Ryan Gebhardt, and Sumit Chaudhary from Iowa State University; and David Wheeler, chemistry student from 澳门六合彩官方网站.


Faculty member Broad passes away

Faculty member Broad passes away

Dr. David Broad, a University of North Georgia (澳门六合彩官方网站) professor of sociology, passed away on Sunday, Oct. 6.
Associate professor serves  as keynote speaker

Associate professor serves as keynote speaker

澳门六合彩官方网站 faculty member Dr. Siew Chan served as the keynote speaker for an international conference with more than 100 attendees.
澳门六合彩官方网站 welcomes new faculty members

澳门六合彩官方网站 welcomes new faculty members

澳门六合彩官方网站 is welcoming more than 50 new full-time faculty members this fall, and they had a chance to acclimate to 澳门六合彩官方网站 in a new faculty orientation held this July.
Chemistry students excel in research, competition

Chemistry students excel in research, competition

Students in 澳门六合彩官方网站's Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry recently scored a variety of impressive accomplishments.