Emily Cuffin-Munday
Emily completed a master’s degree in chemistry at the University of Manchester in 2021. Her research project focused on a computational investigation of the structures and photophysical properties of chiral graphene nanoribbons and exploring possible bottom-up syntheses for these materials. She joined the Royal Society of Chemistry as a publishing editor in 2022 and moved to a development editor role in 2023.
Outside of work, Emily enjoys running, hiking and climbing, as well as the odd crochet project!
- Research
Quantum tunnelling explains why several supposedly stable benzene isomers will never be made
Research highlights importance of considering quantum effects in computational studies on strained molecules
- Research
Bad habits obscuring thermodynamic reality of photocatalytic reactions
Dubious assumptions and contentious nomenclature muddying the literature
- Research
Organocatalyst deconstructs mixed plastic waste into monomers
Step towards closed-loop recycling
- Research
Click chemistry with sound-induced mechanocatalysis
Researcher behind work says they ‘could be very close to a perfect way to conduct green chemistry’
- Research
Boron-doped olympicenes are surprisingly stable
By possessing useful electronic properties, boraolympicenes could have potential applications in organic electronics
- Research
Surprise as electric fields found to cleave bond homolytically
Study also uncovers that the reaction rate in a field increases linearly with the solvent dielectric constant
- Research
Gigantic database of building blocks will help artificial intelligence uncover new organocatalysts
Publicly available dataset containing thousands of structures could help chemists develop data-driven reaction optimisation methods for organic synthesis
- Research
Computational study says polonium can form hydrogen bonds
Bonds driven by relativistic effects, rather than electronegativity differences