Robert Bowles, ÂÜÀòÉç, United Kingdom
After an early career in marine biotechnology, Robert moved out of the lab, gaining five years’ experience in sales and marketing of educational software to schools. He joined the ÂÜÀòÉç twelve years ago, and managed a programme of their successful education and careers projects.
As a qualified careers adviser he currently works in the ÂÜÀòÉç’s Career Management team; offering careers advice to our membership and the wider chemistry community.
Chris Cave-Ayland, University of Southampton, United Kingdom
Chris Cave-Ayland is based at the University of Southampton working as part of the local High Performance Computing team. He previously worked for several years as a postdoc developing the Fortran + Python Monte Carlo molecular simulation code ProtoMS. He is passionate about teaching programming and software engineering skills to young researchers through the Software Carpentry Foundation
Jeremy Frey, University of Southampton, United Kingdom
Jeremy Frey is a Professor of Physical Chemistry and the head of the Computational Systems Chemistry Group at the University of Southampton. Before working at Southampton, he obtained his DPhil on experimental and theoretical aspects of van der Waals complexes in the Physical Chemistry Labs, Oxford University under the supervision of Professor Brian Howard, followed by a NATO/EPSRC fellowship at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory and University of California, with Professor Y. T. Lee.
Jeremy's experimental research probes molecular organisation in environments from single molecules in molecular beams to liquid interfaces using laser spectroscopy from the IR to soft X-rays. He investigates how e-Science infrastructure supports scientific research with an emphasis on the way digital infrastructure can enhance the intelligent creation, dissemination and analysis of scientific data
Sami Kanza, University of Southampton, United Kingdom
Samantha Kanza is an Enterprise Fellow at the University of Southampton. She completed her MEng in Computer Science at the University of Southampton and then worked for BAE Systems Applied Intelligence for a year before returning to do an iPhD in Web Science (in Computer Science and Chemistry), which focused on Semantic Tagging of Scientific Documents and Electronic Lab Notebooks. She was awarded her PhD in April 2018. Samantha works in the interdisciplinary research area of applying computer science techniques to the scientific domain, specifically through the use of semantic web technologies and artificial intelligence. Her research includes looking at electronic lab notebooks and smart laboratories, to improve the digitization and knowledge management of the scientific record using semantic web technologies; and using IoT devices in the laboratory. She is also working as a semantic web researcher on an Innovate UK funded Agricultural Research Project, focusing on semantically modelling agricultural datasets and crop variables
David Ormrod Morley, PG Representative on Faraday Division Council, United Kingdom
David Ormrod Morley is a PhD student in the Department of Theoretical Chemistry at Oxford University, having obtained his MChem and MSc at the same institution. He has been postgraduate representative on the Faraday Division Council since May, and is keen to hear ideas and opinions from the postgraduate community on how the RSC can support them in their early career. His research centres on the computational and theoretical modelling of 2D network forming materials. In addition to his PhD, David is a lecturer at Brasenose and Hertford Colleges and co-hosts a theoretical chemistry podcast
Laura Powel, University of Southampton, United Kingdom
I am a PhD student at the University of Southampton and I use the cloud based system “LabTrove” to keep my experimental data, literature notes and general prose in one coherently linked place. Like many scientists I have used a variety of desktop based applications to process data, write reports and manage my day to day work load. I used a prescriptive electronic notebook software when I worked in industry and also designed my own templates through Microsoft Word and Excel. My project generates data in many forms and maintaining recognisable file paths is a challenge that is made much easier using the features available in LabTrove
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Simon Coles
National Crystallography Service, United Kingdom
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Lauren Holley
DSTL, United Kingdom
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Nicola Knight
University of Southampton, United Kingdom
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Frank Longford
University of Southampton, United Kingdom
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Ale Palermo
ÂÜÀòÉç, United Kingdom
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Lee Steinberg
TMCS CDT, United Kingdom