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March 25, 2015

  • Date:29MondayMay 2023

    Solar Panels for Light-to-Chemical Conversion

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    Time
    11:00 - 12:15
    Title
    2023 G.M.J. SCHMIDT MEMORIAL LECTURE
    Location
    Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
    LecturerProf. Erwin Reisner
    Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge
    Organizer
    Faculty of Chemistry
    Homepage
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about Solar panels are well known to produce electricity, but they...»
    Solar panels are well known to produce electricity, but they are also in early-stage development for the production of sustainable fuels and chemicals. These panels mimic plant leaves in shape and function as demonstrated for overall solar water splitting to produce green H2 by the laboratories of Nocera and Domen.1,2
    This presentation will give an overview of our recent progress to construct prototype solar panel devices for the conversion of carbon dioxide and solid waste streams into fuels and higher-value chemicals through molecular surface-engineering of solar panels with suitable catalysts. Specifically, a standalone ‘photoelectrochemical leaf’ based on an integrated lead halide perovskite-BiVO4 tandem light absorber architecture has been built for the solar CO2 reduction to produce syngas.3 Syngas is an energy-rich gas mixture containing CO and H2 and currently produced from fossil fuels. The renewable production of syngas may allow for the synthesis of renewable liquid oxygenates and hydrocarbon fuels. Recent advances in the manufacturing have enabled the reduction of material requirements to fabricate such devices and make the leaves sufficiently light weight to even float on water, thereby enabling application on open water sources.4 The tandem design also allows for the integration of biocatalysts and the selective and bias-free conversion of CO2-to-formate has been demonstrated using enzymes.5 The versatility of the integrated leaf architecture has been demonstrated by replacing the perovskite light absorber by BiOI for solar water and CO2 splitting to demonstrate week-long stability.6
    An alternative solar carbon capture and utilisation technology is based on co-deposited semiconductor powders on a conducting substrate.2 Modification of these immobilized powders with a molecular catalyst provides us with a photocatalyst sheet that can cleanly produce formic acid from aqueous CO2.7 CO2-fixing bacteria grown on such a ‘photocatalyst sheet’ enable the production of multicarbon products through clean CO2-to-acetate conversion.8 The deposition of a single semiconductor material on glass gives panels for the sunlight-powered conversion plastic and biomass waste into H2 and organic products, thereby allowing for simultaneous waste remediation and fuel production.9 The concept and prospect behind these integrated systems for solar energy conversion,10 related approaches,11 and their relevance to secure and harness sustainable energy supplies in a fossil-fuel free economy will be discussed.
    Colloquia
  • Date:29MondayMay 2023

    Foundations of Computer Science Seminar

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    Time
    11:15 - 12:30
    Title
    The Randomized k-Server Conjecture is False!
    Location
    Jacob Ziskind Building
    LecturerYuval Rabani
    Hebrew University of Jerusalem
    Organizer
    Department of Computer Science and Applied Mathematics
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    Lecture
  • Date:30TuesdayMay 2023

    Site-Specific Isopeptide Bond Formation: A Powerful Tool for the Generation of Potent and Nontoxic Antimicrobial Peptides

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    Time
    10:00 - 11:00
    Location
    Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Biological Sciences
    LecturerDr. Naiem Wani
    Dept. of Biomolecular Sciences-WIS
    Organizer
    Department of Biomolecular Sciences
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    Lecture
  • Date:30TuesdayMay 2023

    Homogeneous (De)hydrogenative Catalysis for a Circular Economy

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    Time
    11:00 - 12:00
    Location
    Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
    LecturerDr. Amit Kumar
    School of Chemistry, University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, KY169ST, UK
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials Science
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about The development of sustainable methods for the closed-loop p...»
    The development of sustainable methods for the closed-loop production and recycling of plastics is an important challenge of current times. Reactions based on catalytic (de)hydrogenation are atom-economic, and sustainable routes for organic transformations.1 Using the following examples, this lecture will discuss the application of homogeneous (de)hydrogenative catalysis for the synthesis and degradation of polymers to enable a circular economy: (a) synthesis of polyamides/nylons from the ruthenium catalysed dehydrogenative coupling of diamines and diols and its reverse reaction i.e. hydrogenative depolymerisation of nylons,2 (b) synthesis of polyureas from the ruthenium/manganese catalysed dehydrogenative coupling of diamines3,4 and methanol, and its reverse reaction, i.e. hydrogenative depolymerisation of polyureas (Figure 1B)5, (c) Synthesis of polyethyleneimines from manganese catalysed coupling of ethylene glycol and ethylenediamine or the self-coupling of ethanolamine,6 and (d) Synthesis of polyureas and polyurethanes from the dehydrogenative coupling of diformamides and diamines/diols and its reverse reaction i.e. hydrogenative depolymerisation of polyureas and polyurethanes to diformamides and diamines/diols.7 Some applications of some of the polymers made using dehydrogenative processes in the field of batteries will also be discussed.8
    Lecture
  • Date:30TuesdayMay 2023

    Bacterial community indicators to monitor the health of our changing environment

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    Time
    11:30 - 12:30
    Location
    https://weizmann.zoom.us/j/92703563162?pwd=cW5pb0Nzcm1XS2RObyt6NVZHRUFHUT09
    LecturerProf. Gavin Lear
    University of Auckland
    Organizer
    Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences
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    Lecture
  • Date:30TuesdayMay 2023

    Cognitive neuroscience of learning and memory in human infants

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    Time
    12:30 - 13:30
    Location
    Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
    LecturerProf. Nick Turk-Browne
    Dept of Psychology, Yale University
    Organizer
    Department of Brain Sciences
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    AbstractShow full text abstract about In this talk, I will present the approach my lab has develop...»
    In this talk, I will present the approach my lab has developed for performing fMRI studies in awake infants during cognitive tasks. I will share some of our recent studies and highlight some of the big open questions that remain to be addressed, with potential to reveal the brain systems underlying how infants perceive and attend to their environment, why infants are such proficient learners, and why we all have amnesia for infant experiences. Despite countless limitations and challenges at present, this work suggests that awake infant fMRI could become more feasible, useful, and ubiquitous in cognitive neuroscience.
    Lecture
  • Date:30TuesdayMay 2023

    Electrosome assembly: a first look at the structural principles underlying ion channel biogenesis

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    Time
    14:00 - 15:00
    Location
    Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
    LecturerProf. Daniel Minor
    Departments of Biochemistry & Biophysics University of California San Francisco
    Organizer
    Department of Chemical and Structural Biology
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    Lecture
  • Date:01ThursdayJune 2023

    Evolution in a Cup – use of small-scale bioreactors to study dynamics of microorganism

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    Time
    09:00 - 10:00
    Location
    Max and Lillian Candiotty Building
    LecturerDr. Ghil Jona
    The Bacteriology & Genomic Repository Unit
    Organizer
    Department of Life Sciences Core Facilities
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    Lecture
  • Date:01ThursdayJune 2023

    Physics Colloquium

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    Time
    11:15 - 12:30
    Title
    Elastic Strain Engineering for Unprecedented Properties
    Location
    Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical Sciences
    LecturerProf. Ju Li
    MIT – Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
    Organizer
    Faculty of Physics
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about The emergence of “ultra-strength materials” that can withsta...»
    The emergence of “ultra-strength materials” that can withstand significant fractions of the ideal strength at component scale without any inelastic relaxation harbingers a new field within mechanics of materials. Recently, we have experimentally achieved more than 13% reversible tensile strains in Si that fundamentally redefines what it means to be Si, and ~7% uniform tensile strain in micron-scale single-crystalline diamond bridge arrays, where thousands of transistors and quantum sensors can be integrated in one diamond microbridge. Elastic Strain Engineering (ESE) aims to endow material structures with very large stresses and stress gradients to guide electronic, photonic, and spin excitations and control energy, mass, and information flows. As “smaller is stronger” for most engineering materials at room temperature, a much larger dynamical range of tensile-and-shear deviatoric stresses for small-scale structures can be achieved, as the defect (e.g., dislocation, crack) population dynamics change from defect-propagation to defect-nucleation controlled. Thus, all six stress components can be used to tune the physical and chemical properties of a material like a 7-element alloy. Four pillars of ESE need to be addressed experimentally and computationally: (a) making materials and structures that can withstand deviatoric elastic strain patterns that are exceptionally large and extended in space-time volume, inhomogeneous, dynamically reversible, or combinations thereof, (b) measuring and understanding how functional properties such as photonic and electronic characteristics vary with imposed elastic strain tensor, (c) characterizing and modeling the mechanisms of stress relaxations; the goal is not to use them for forming but to defeat them at service temperatures (usually room temperature and above) and extended timescales, and (d) computational design based on first principles, e.g. predicting ideal strength surface, topological changes in band structures, etc. assisted by machine learning.
    Colloquia
  • Date:01ThursdayJune 2023

    Vision and AI

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    Time
    12:15 - 13:15
    Title
    Spaceborne multi-view computational tomography (CT)
    Location
    Jacob Ziskind Building
    LecturerYoav Schechner
    Technion
    Organizer
    Department of Computer Science and Applied Mathematics
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about We describe new computer vision tasks stemming from upcoming...»
    We describe new computer vision tasks stemming from upcoming multiview tomography from space. Solutions involve both novel imaging hardware and computational algorithms, based on machine learning and differential rendering. This can transform climate research and medical X-ray CT. The key idea is that advanced computing can enable computed tomography of volumetric scenes, based scattered radiation. We describe an upcoming space mission (CloudCT, funded by the ERC). It has 10 nano-satellites that will fly in an unprecedented formation, to capture the same scene (cloud fields) from multiple views simultaneously, using special cameras. The satellites and cameras are built now. They - and the algorithms - are specified to meet computer vision tasks, including geometric and polarimetric self-calibration in orbit, and estimation of 3D volumetric distribution of matter and microphysical properties. Deep learning and differential rendering enable analysis to scale to big data downlinked from orbit. Core ideas are generalized for medical X-ray imaging, to enable significant reduction of dose and acquisition time, while extracting chemical properties per voxel. The creativity of the computer vision and graphics communities can assist in critical needs for society, and this talk points out relevant challenges.
    Lecture
  • Date:01ThursdayJune 2023

    Volatile cortical working memory representations crystalize with practice

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    Time
    12:30 - 13:30
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerProf. Peyman Golshani
    David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA
    Organizer
    Department of Brain Sciences
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    AbstractShow full text abstract about Working memory (WM), the process through which information i...»
    Working memory (WM), the process through which information is transiently maintained and manipulated over a brief period of time, is essential for most cognitive functions. However, the mechanisms underlying the generation and stability of WM neuronal representations at the population level remain elusive. To uncover these mechanisms, we trained head-fixed mice to perform  an olfactory working memory task and used optogenetics to delineate circuits causal for behavioral performance. We used mesoscopic and light bead  two photon imaging to record from up to 35,000 secondary motor cortical neurons simulataneously across multiple days and show differential stabilization of different task parameters with learning and practice of the task. We find that cortical working memory representations causal for task performance are highly volatile but only stabilize after multiple days of practice well after task learning. We hypothesize that representational drift soon after learning may allow for higher levels of flexibility for new task rules. 
    I will also review some of the new open-source tools developed for large-scale imaging of neural activity patterns in freely behaving animals.
    Lecture
  • Date:01ThursdayJune 2023

    Ben May Lecutre Series

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    Time
    14:00 - 15:00
    Title
    Coherence Maps and State-to-State Pathways of Excitation Energy Transfer
    Location
    Stone Administration Building
    LecturerProf Nancy Makri
    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
    Organizer
    Ben May Center for Chemical Theory and Computation
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about The interplay among electronic coherence, vibrational dampin...»
    The interplay among electronic coherence, vibrational damping, quantum dispersion, topological effects and thermal fluctuations leads to rich behaviors in the dynamics of excitation energy flow. We use real-time path integral methods developed in our group to perform fully quantum mechanical simulations of excitation energy transfer in large molecular aggregates. The systems are described through a Frenkel exciton Hamiltonian where all vibrational normal modes of each molecular unit and their coupling to the ground and excited electronic states are treated explicitly at any temperature. Simulations have been carried out in J aggregates of perylene bisimide, model dendrimers, and photosynthetic light harvesting complexes. Coherence maps offer powerful visualization tools that reveal the creation and destruction of quantum superpositions and enable a state-to-state pathway analysis of energy flow.
    Lecture
  • Date:01ThursdayJune 2023

    Somatic mutation in normal tissues

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    Time
    14:00 - 15:00
    LecturerDr. Inigo Martincorena
    Group Leader, Sanger Institute, Cambridge, UK.
    Organizer
    Dwek Institute for Cancer Therapy Research
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  • Date:04SundayJune 2023

    Special guest seminar

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    Time
    All day
    Title
    T cell memory, metabolism and the microbiome
    Location
    Max and Lillian Candiotty Building
    LecturerProfessor Sammy Bedoui
    Organizer
    Department of Immunology and Regenerative Biology
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:04SundayJune 2023

    Paleoclimate reconstruction using speleothems in dry and cold regions.

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    Time
    11:00 - 12:00
    Location
    Sussman Family Building for Environmental Sciences
    LecturerAnton Vaks
    GSI, Israel
    Organizer
    Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
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    Lecture
  • Date:06TuesdayJune 2023

    Chemical and Biological Physics Guest Seminar

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    Time
    10:00 - 11:00
    Title
    Materials with a twist: atomically controlled interfaces for clean energy
    Location
    Perlman Chemical Sciences Building
    LecturerProf Magali Lingenfelder
    Max Planck-EPFL Laboratory for Molecular Nanoscience and Technology, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL)
    Organizer
    Department of Chemical and Biological Physics
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about Our society faces a critical challenge in shifting from a re...»
    Our society faces a critical challenge in shifting from a reliance on carbon-based energy to sustainable renewable sources. A key step towards achieving clean energy lies in developing efficient catalysts that can convert chemical energy into electricity or use electrons to generate chemical energy.
    In our research group, we tackle these challenges by creating customized materials that draw inspiration from nature (biomimicry) and combine principles from interfacial chemistry and surface physics. For this presentation, I focus on the process of photosynthesis as inspiration for the design, characterization, and dynamic nature of functional interfaces that drive energy conversion processes such as CO2 electroreduction and water splitting.
    I will also discuss the application of cutting-edge scanning probe microscopy, which allows us to visualize dynamic electrochemical processes at the nanoscale (operando imaging). Additionally, I will highlight our use of unconventional strategies that leverage chiral molecules and abundant two-dimensional materials to enhance electrocatalytic conversion processes.
    (References : Nanoletters, 2021, 21, 2059; Nature Comm., 2022, 13, 3356, IJC 62, 11, 2022).
    Lecture
  • Date:06TuesdayJune 2023

    Identifying and Characterizing Biocrusts Using Spectroscopy

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    Time
    11:30 - 12:30
    Location
    Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Biological Sciences
    LecturerDr. Offer Rozenstein
    ARO Volcani
    Organizer
    Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:06TuesdayJune 2023

    Local and long-range inputs contributing to sequence generation in the zebra finch

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    Time
    12:30 - 13:30
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerProf. Michael A. Long
    NYU School of Medicine
    Organizer
    Department of Brain Sciences
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about : A central question in neuroscience is how local processing...»
    : A central question in neuroscience is how local processing and long-range influences work together to create behaviorally relevant neural dynamics. We address this issue by examining the song control pathway in the zebra finch. We find sufficient synaptic information is present in a key cortical structure to enable propagation of song-related sequences. We further demonstrate that long-range inputs from the motor thalamus can engage this circuitry in the service of behavior and large-scale brain synchronization. Our findings suggest that thalamic inputs may play an important initiating role for behaviorally-relevant cortical activity across species.
    Lecture
  • Date:06TuesdayJune 2023

    Microbiome Metabolites: Syntheses and Surprises

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    Time
    14:00 - 15:00
    Location
    Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
    LecturerProf. Karl Gademann
    Department of Chemistry University of Zurich
    Organizer
    Department of Chemical and Structural Biology
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    Lecture
  • Date:06TuesdayJune 2023

    Drivers and dependencies arising during tumor evolution

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    Time
    14:00 - 15:00
    Location
    Max and Lillian Candiotty Building
    LecturerProf. Kris Wood
    Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology, Duke University
    Organizer
    Dwek Institute for Cancer Therapy Research
    Contact
    Lecture

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