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A Chemical Mystery: Navigating the Unpredictable Course of Research
Did you know that research scientists and detectives have some things in common? Research often does not go according to plan, and sometimes in the lab you stumble upon something unexpected and mysterious. If you’re lucky, you can follow the clues to solve a mystery that you didn’t originally set out to solve. This is the story of how my biggest discovery during my sabbatical year at Seoul National University (SNU) was not in the research area I set out to study. It’s not a disappointment, nor is it something that really surprises me. In this post I’ve described the chemical mystery that I stumbled upon and how I solved…
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Trees: The Ultimate Chemists. How Trees Inspire Me to Do Better Chemistry
When I talk to people about my research, I have found that it is not usually very helpful to say that I am an organometallic chemist or (worse) to say that I synthesize carbon dioxide complexes of molybdenum and tungsten. Instead, I usually start by talking about trees. Most people know about photosynthesis and that a tree, like all plants, harnesses the energy from light to grow. Some people even know that the whole body of the tree: its leaves, trunk, roots and all its branches are made primarily of carbon. Where does the tree get all of this carbon? From the air. The tree uses the energy it collects…
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The Chemist and the Counselor Take Korea
What’s a social worker with no Korean language skills to do when her partner lands a research sabbatical in South Korea? Start a blog, of course! Does said social worker have any expertise that would suggest she knows how to build a blog? Well, no. But she has two weeks of Korean quarantine time to kill, so why not? Forty-eight hours after signing up for a domain name, many of them spent in figuring out how to get this far, here is the blog we will use to document our time in Korea. Last summer, Peter first started talking with a fellow organometallic chemist in South Korea about the possibility…