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Cancelled: Horizons Symposium 2020: Materials for Energy

27 - 28 April 2020, Seoul, South Korea


Introduction

In light of the ongoing coronavirus outbreak, and after careful consideration, we have made a decision to cancel the Horizons symposium: Materials in Energy, scheduled for 27-28 April in Seoul, Korea.
 
As the world continues to deal with the new coronavirus we are aware that the issue is creating a number of uncertainties around potential travel disruption and health risks. Given that the event is soon to take place, we are taking clear action now to remove any uncertainty regarding delegates’ plans for the coming weeks.
 
We propose to cancel the Horizons symposium for the following reasons:
 

  • We do not know the direction that the coronavirus outbreak will take. The World Health Organization has declared the virus a global health emergency. With people travelling from all over the world we do not want to take any risks, for example, with regard to potential disruption and delegates facing challenges returning home.
  • The very essence of the meeting is to bring people together face-to-face to discuss and debate developing areas of materials and nanoscience. While there are currently no clear exclusions on travel to South Korea, individual delegates have been recommended to or may prefer not to travel at this time. The Horizons symposium would not be the same event without the contribution of delegates from around the world and we have therefore decided to cancel the event.
  • The wellbeing of everyone attending any of our events is our number one priority. While meeting is important to us, we believe that cancellation of this year’s event is the most sensible approach at the current time.  

Please contact events@rsc.org with any questions.

Speakers
Abstract Submission

Poster Abstracts 

Submit your poster abstract by 17 February 2020. Authors will be notified of the outcome of the review process within about 3 weeks of the submission deadline. The abstracts should be no longer than one A4 page in portrait layout. Please ensure you provide the details of the presenting author.
 
Registration
REGISTRATION OPENING 3RD FEBRUARY

Please read the registration information before registering.  You can register by clicking on the online registration link on this page when registration is open.  Please note accommodation is not included in the registration fee.

For non-member registrants attending this event, affiliate membership of the Royal Society of Chemistry is available until the end of 2020, the affiliate membership application will be processed and commence once the registrant has attended the event.

Regsitration fees are as follows:
Early Bird
(9 March 2020)
Standard
(30 March 2020)
Members* $170.30 $196.50
Non-members $235.80 $262.00
Student members* $65.50 $78.60
Student non-members $78.60 $91.70


* If you are an Royal Society of Chemistry member and wish to register for this meeting, please select the member option on the online registration page. You will need to enter your membership number.

Travel and Health Insurance

Delegates are advised to ensure that they have appropriate travel and health insurance.
 

Terms and Conditions for Events run by the Royal Society of Chemistry

Bursaries

We have two types of grants available to attend this meeting:

  • A limited number of non-competitive travel grants of up to £200 are available for PhD students and early career scientists. These are assigned on a first come, first served basis.  Applicants must be Royal Society of Chemistry members of any level at the time of making their application.
  • Competitive grants of up to £800 are available to assist with international travel expenses for PhD students, postdocs within 10 years of completing their PhD and early career scientists (including technicians and industrialists) within 10 years of leaving full time education. In addition, applicants must be Royal Society of Chemistry members of any level at the time of making their application.
To take advantage of these grants and many other benefits, become a member. Follow the link on the right hand side to find out more and join today!


Grants for Carers

Grants for carers have been introduced following the Royal Society of Chemistry Breaking the barriers report where 78% of chemists working in UK academia felt that managing parenting and/or caring responsibilities has an impact on women’s retention and progression. This fund is not limited to women scientists and welcomes applications from anyone with caring responsibilities. These grants have been supported by The Royal Society of Chemistry’s Chemists’ Community Fund.
 
You can apply for up to a maximum of £1000/year to assist with additional financial costs that you incur for care usually provided by you whilst you attend a chemistry related meeting, conference or workshop or a professional development event.

Caring responsibilities are wide and varied, and so each application will be individually assessed, examples of applications that we will consider include:
  • paying for extra home help or nursing care for a dependent whilst you will not be present
  • additional medical/respite care for a dependent whilst you will not be present
  • travel expenses for a relative to travel with you to care for dependents whilst you attend a meeting or event
  • paying for extended hours with a care worker/childminder/play scheme to cover time when you will arrive home later than normal. 
You are eligible to apply if:
  • you are a chemist
  • you will incur additional caring expenses whilst attending a chemistry-related meeting, conference, event or workshop or a professional development event
  • you will use these funds to cover the cost of care that you usually provide
  • you are based in the UK or Ireland or if not, you will normally have held three years RSC membership (past or current).
Venue
Ewha Woman's University

Ewha Woman's University, 52 Ewhayeodae-gil, Daehyeon-dong, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul, 03760 , South Korea

Accommodation
Please note that accommodation is not included in the registration fee.

Committee
Seth Marder (Chair), Georgia Institute of Technology, United States

Seth Marder is currently the Georgia Power Chair of Energy Efficiency and Regents’ Professor in the School of Chemistry and Biochemistry and a Professor of Materials Science and Engineering (courtesy) at the Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech).  He is the director of Georgia Tech’s Center for the Science and Technology of Advanced Materials and Interfaces.
 
Dr. Marder received his BA in Chemistry from MIT in 1978 and his Ph.D. from the U. of Wisconsin-Madison in 1985. After completing his postdoctoral work at the University of Oxford from 1985–1987, he moved to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) at Caltech.
 
Marder has served on numerous advisory boards for journals and is the Founding Chair of the Editorial Board for the Royal Society of Chemistry premier materials journal, Materials Horizons.
 
Marder is a fellow of the: National Academy of Inventors, American Physical Society, Royal Society of Chemistry, Materials Research Society, Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE), Optical Society of America and American Association for the Advancement of Science.  
 
He received a NSF Special Creativity Award Extension, the Lew Allen Award for Research, from JPL, the MRS Mid-Career Award, the American Chemical Society, Arthur C. Cope Scholar Award, Humboldt Senior Research Award, and Georgia Tech’s Class of 1934 Distinguished Professor Award. 
 
He has an H-index of >100, with > 58,500 citations (Google Scholar), has 39 granted patents, and served as a mentor for of ~250 students, postdoctoral and visiting researchers.


Sossina Haile, Northwestern University, United States

Sossina M. Haile is the Walter P. Murphy Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at Northwestern University, a position she assumed in 2015 after serving 18 years on the faculty at the California Institute of Technology. She earned her Ph.D. in Materials Science and Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1992 and spent two years, 1991-1993, at the Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research in Stuttgart, Germany, first as a Fulbright Fellow then as a Humboldt Fellow. Haile’s research broadly encompasses materials, especially oxides, for sustainable electrochemical energy technologies. She has established a new class of fuel cells with record performance for clean and efficient electricity generation, and created new avenues for harnessing sunlight to meet rising energy demands. Amongst her many awards, in 2008 Haile received an American Competitiveness and Innovation Fellowship from the U.S. National Science Foundation in recognition of “her timely and transformative research in the energy field and her dedication to inclusive mentoring, education and outreach across many levels,” and in 2010 she was awarded the Chemical Pioneer Award of the American Institute of Chemists. She is a fellow of the Materials Research Society, the American Ceramics Society, the African Academy of Sciences, and the Ethiopian Academy of Sciences, and serves on the editorial boards of Materials Horizons and Annual Review of Materials Research.


Aron Walsh, Imperial College London, United Kingdom

Aron Walsh is Professor of Materials Design at Imperial College London and dual Professor at Yonsei University. He was awarded his Ph.D in Chemistry from Trinity College Dublin, completed a postdoctoral position at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (USA), and held a Marie Curie fellowship at University College London. He began his independent research career at the University of Bath where he held a Royal Society University Research Fellowship. His research combines technique development and applications at the interface between solid-state chemistry and physics. He was awarded the EU-40 prize from the Materials Research Society for his work on the theory of solar energy materials, as well as the 2019 Corday-Morgan Prize. He is Scientific Editor for Materials Horizons.


Anna Fontcuberta i Morral, EPFL, Switzerland

After graduating in Physics from the U. Barcelona in 1997, Prof. Fontcuberta i Morral performed her PhD in Materials Science at Ecole Polytechnique (France). She then moved to the group of Prof Atwater at Caltech, where she also co-founded the company Aonex Technologies. In 2005 she took a group leader position at TU Munich. Since 2008 she leads the Laboratory of Semiconductor Materials at EPFL. Her research focuses on enabling new materials and structures for next generation solar cells and quantum computing.


  • Dong Ha Kim (host) Ewha Womans University, South Korea
  • Zhiyong Tang National Center for Nanoscience and Technology, China

Organised by
Royal Society of Chemistry
Ewha Womans University
BK21 Plus Program, Department of Chemistry and Nano Science, Ewha Womans University
Institute of Clean Energy Materials, Ewha Womans University
Institute of NanoBio Tenolology, Ewha Womans University
Center for Hybrid Interfacial Chemical Structure, Ewha Womans University
 
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