Four undergraduates involved in research presented at Canadian Chemistry Conference
Four undergraduate students participated in research that Amy Keirstead, assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry and Physics, recently presented at the 96th Canadian Chemistry Conference and Exhibition, which was held May 26-30, 2013, in Quebec City.
Keirstead gave two presentations at the exhibition, both of which focused on her research program investigating the use of ionic liquids for a variety of green chemistry and nanotechnology applications.
Her oral presentation, titled βMonitoring the Dynamics of Spiropyran Photochromism in Ionic Liquids Using Emission Spectroscopy: Direct Observation of Spiropyran Phosphorescenceβ was given in the Advances in Physical Organic Chemistry symposium and included contributions from ΒιΆΉΒγΑΔ student co-authors Robyn Gaudet (Chemistry β11), Annie Leslie (Neuroscience β13), and Sean Naughton (Biochemistry and Medical Biology β13). This work was supported ΒιΆΉΒγΑΔ College of Arts and Sciences and the Vice-President for Research mini-grant programs.
Keirstead also presented a poster titled βInvestigating the Influence of Ionic Liquid Media on the Photoluminescence of Siloles,β based on a project funded by the Maine Space Grant Consortium Education and Seed Research grant. Co-authors on the poster included Jerome Mullin, Ph.D., professor in the Department of Chemistry and Physics, ΒιΆΉΒγΑΔ undergraduates Regina Scalise (Chemistry β13) and Sean Naughton (Biochemistry and Medical Biology, β13) as well as colleagues from the University of Southern Maine, Justin Crumrine, Caryn Prudente, Ph.D., and Hank Tracy, Ph.D.