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Nachrichten aus der Chemie| 64 | Mai 2016 | www.gdch.de/nachrichten
492 BInhaltV
Zeitschrift der Gesellschaft Deutscher Chemiker
Band 64 | Mai 2016
B LeitartikelV
491 Raus aus der GrauzoneG. Sponholz, H. Nolte
BWissenschaft & ForschungV
494 Notizen aus der Chemie
Trendbericht
497 Analytische Chemie 2014/2015M. Vogel et al.
Prozessanalytik mit Ramanspektroskopie, Arsen und
Quecksilber in der Speziesanalytik, Multi-Omics-Ansät-
ze, Ionisationstechniken, multidimensionale Trenntech-
niken, Chip-basierte Trennungen, bildgebende Verfah-
ren, Oberflächenanalytik.
Mechanochemie
509 Synthesen in der KugelmühleF. Fischer, F. Emmerling
Mechanochemie braucht kein Lösungsmittel und funk-
tioniert bei Raumtemperatur. Über die zugrundeliegen-
den Prozesse ist bislang wenig bekannt.
Organische Leuchtdioden
514 Mehr Licht durch orientierte FarbstoffmoleküleT. D. Schmidt, T. Lampe, W. Brütting
Damit organische Leuchtdioden am Leuchtmittelmarkt
Fuß fassen können, muss ihre Effizienz steigen.
Synthese im Blickpunkt
519 Katalytische C-H-Aktivierungen mit unedlen Übergangsmetallen
A. Diehl, G. Manolikakes
201602Mitteilungsblatt der GesellschaftÖsterreichischerChemiker
Verlagspostamt 1010 WienP.b.b. / 05Z036512 M
05 2016Zeitschrift derGesellschaftDeutscherChemiker
64. Jahrgang Mai 2016S. 489 - 596
TrendberichtAnalytische Chemie I S. 497
LichtMoleküle mit Richtung I S. 514
Synthesen in der Kugelmühle I S. 509
Titelbild:
Dipolmomente aus -
richten [zu Seite 514].
Illustration: leographics/
Fotolia
BIndustrie & TechnikV
523 Notizen aus der Wirtschaft
Pharmazie
524 China: mehr pflanzliche ArzneienR. Schmid, X. Xiong
Gewinne mit traditioneller chinesischer Medizin erwirt-
schaften ausländische Unternehmen. Zudem lässt die
Qualität der chinesischen Produkte zu wünschen übrig.
Bilanz 2015
527 Henkel: Mehr fürs Kleben und Reinigen
528 Chemiewirtschaft in ÖsterreichJ. Pummer
529 Thorsten Daubenfeld: Der Wirtschaftschemiker
Bilanz 2015
530 Evonik: Tierernährung und Kosmetik
Ressourceneffizienz
531 Klima schützen – Kosten senkenH. Precht
Die Software Umberto erstellt bei der Worlée-Chemie
Material- und Energieflussanalysen.
Bilanz 2015
533 Lanxess: Schnell neu ausgerichtet
Reaktionstechnik
534 Ein Jet für Energie aus der SonneB. Baumstümmler, S. Gärtner, A. Colsmann, H. Schirra
Symbiose aus Mikroreaktions- und Nanotechnik.
Prozessanalytik
537 Zetapotenzial und WasseraufbereitungB. Fulbright et al.
Die Online-Überwachung von Flockungsprozessen kann
helfen, Energie, Chemikalien und Zeit zu sparen.
Diese Nachrichten aus der Chemie finden GDCh-
Mitglieder ab 10. Mai auch als E-Paper im
Internet: www.nachrichtenausderchemie.de
571 E-Learning: Wie hätten
Sie‘s denn gern?
573 150 Jahre: Nein, wir
haben uns nicht verzählt
574 Fachgruppen
und Arbeitskreise
576 Jungchemikerforum
578 Neuaufnahmen
578 Die GDCh vor Ort
581 Euchems-NewsletterEuCheMSEuCheMSN E W S L E T T E R
May 2016
Shadowing a MEP
David Cole-Hamilton attended a three
day training period shadowing Catherine
Stihler, Member of the European Parlia-
ment (MEP), as part of the “MEP-Scientist
pairing scheme” run by the Science and
Technology Options Assessment group
(STOA) of the European Parliament. This is
his report:
Catherine Stihler works at an incredible
pace, rushing from meeting to meeting on
all different kinds of topics with her two
outstanding assistants, Vanessa Ivanov and
Alise Askinezere, briefing her as she goes. It
was very hard for me to keep up! Somehow
Catherine also manages to read, comment
upon and amend all kinds of papers, legis-
lative proposals and other instruments of
the Parliament. As the rapporteur for the
report of the Committee on the Internal
Market and Consumer Protection (IMCO) on
the European Semester (assessing the EU‘s
annual cycle of economic policy guidance
and surveillance) she had to draft the re-
port and then ensure cross-party consen-
sus to guarantee that the report is en-
dorsed in IMCO. The report was adopted
with a final vote of 26/1 in favour, much to
the delight of her colleague on the Econ-
omic and Monetary Affairs Committee.
We went to several hearings about
things like ensuring privacy online, a plan-
ning meeting for a forthcoming trip to Ice-
land and a delightful meeting with stu-
dents from all over Europe where Catherine
answered questions, mostly on the Brexit
Referendum. There were several visits by
lobbyists about where the digital economy
is going, how some broadcasters are
threatening the rights to broadcast
throughout Europe and how lack of for-
ward thinking by national governments
can have adverse effects on companies.
We also attended an award ceremony in
which Eurodiaconia (a group of faith-based
organisations which help the needy in so-
ciety) honoured Stadsmissionen, Sweden
for their work with people living in depriva-
tion and homelessness, and Kofoeds Skole,
Denmark for their work in rehabilitating
the long term unemployed.
I was given a fascinating tour of the Par-
liament building by Vanessa and attended
a Working Breakfast on predicting earth-
quakes. STOA put on a series of highly in-
formative lectures about what they and the
many committees do, as well as the differ-
ent instruments of European legislation.
I had to leave the “wash-up” session,
chaired by Paul Rubig, MEP, early so as to
meet with Linda McAvan, MEP, who has
been spearheading a campaign to get car-
bon monoxide detectors fitted in all hotels.
My final meeting organised by Nineta
Majcen was with Slovenian MEP Patricija
Šulin for a discussion about standardising
limits of intoxicating substances in the
blood of vehicle drivers across the EU.
Overall, this was a most fascinating
week. I am in awe of the amount of work
Catherine Stihler and her assistants do.
Their sunny personalities and “can-do” ap-
proach really contribute to their success. I
am so grateful to them and to all who lec-
tured to us from STOA and the other parts of
the Commission and to Zsolt Pataki who
did a wonderful job in masterminding the
whole event.
David Cole Hamilton
MEP Catherine Stihler (front) with her assistants,
Vanessa Ivanov (left) and Alise Askinezere.
Invitation to ECC-6 in Seville
Dear all,
it is my great pleasure to
introduce the 6th EuCheMS
Chemistry Congress, ECC-6,
in Seville this coming Sep-
tember 11th – 15th.
ECC-6 will be Europe’s broa-
dest chemistry conference officially supported
by Europe’s national chemical societies. I
would like to take this opportunity to describe
a little of the events that will contribute to-
wards a programme that we hope you will
find exciting and relevant.
There will be eight main science themes each
sub-divided into several focused topics cover-
ing the breadth of chemistry and allowing
space for approximately 400 oral presenta-
tions to be selected from submitted abstracts.
These will be supported by eight main ple-
naries, ca. 30 topic plenaries and 90 invited
and several award lectures, all presented by
leaders in their fields.
The programme includes additional symposia
and events open to all conference delegates
including the European Young Chemists Net-
work (EYCN), a Latin American symposium
and a series of events designed to be enter-
taining and stimulating including master-
classes (discussing the background, methods
and challenges of a topic with a generalist
audience), ‘Science in a Bar’ (presentations to
a public audience in bars and cafés in the city),
as well as the congress social programme and
banquet.
We have worked hard to provide a programme
which will be a memorable experience for all
and we warmly welcome you to join us in Se-
ville in September.
Peter Edwards
Chair of the ECC-6 scientific committee
EdwardsPG@cardiff.ac.uk
493
Nachrichten aus der Chemie| 64 | Mai 2016 | www.gdch.de/nachrichten
Analytik
540 Proteomik für die klinische DiagnostikG. Pichler, N. A. Kulak
Prozessanalytik
542 Eine Membran vor dem MassenspektrometerM. Stier, S. Scherrle, M. Joos
544 Neue Produkte
BBildung & GesellschaftV
546 Notizen aus Forschungspolitik und Bildung
Entwicklung
547 Die globale Verantwortung der ChemieH. Hopf, A. Krief, S. A. Matlin, G. Mehta
Studium
549 Kristallstrukturen basteln – nicht nur in der SchuleN. Graulich, B. M. Smarsly, K. Reuter
Der handwerkliche Bau von Kristallstrukturen hat
Vorteile, die Simulationen nicht bieten können.
Porträt
552 „Provozieren und auf die Füße treten“Der Nobelpreisträger Barry Sharpless.
BKarriereV
591 Keine Stelle mehr an der Uni – noch keine in der Industrie
Karrierekolumne592 Die Frau mit der Knarre
593 Stellenmarkt
595 Ausgefragt
554 Impressum,
Interskriptum
555 Personalnachrichten 557 Nachruf Hans Schick
558 Korrespondenz
559 Rezensionen
561 Tagungskalender und
-berichte
585 Tatort NMR-Labor
587 2. Obergurgl-Seminar
587 Dr. Josef Wendrinsky
588 Kick-Off-Event
Organische Chemie
589 Zweigstellen
589 ASAC-News
590 Diverse Veranstaltungen
590 Geburtstage
BJournalV
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