The LEAPS team takes part in various international and national events annually, as well as organizes local workshops and seminars, such as the CLAN Seminar Series, in the city of Bologna.
Centro Studi Ricerca e Formazione Cisl - Studium Srl Via della Piazzuola, 71 - 50133 Florence
CLAN seminar series
CNR Sala riunioni (ed.12, 1° p.) Istituto ISOF-CNR Via Gobetti 101, Bologna
Dr. Stefano Di Stefano, Department of Chemistry, University of Roma "La Sapienza"
CLAN seminar series
CNR Sala riunioni (ed.12, 1° p.) Istituto ISOF-CNR Via Gobetti 101, Bologna
Dr. Cristiano Zonta from the Department of Chemical Sciences, University of Padova
Perugia, Italy
Congress
Salerno, Italy
Conference
Strasbourg Convention + Exhibition Centre, Place de Bordeaux, 67082 Strasbourg, France
A key event for the photochemistry community in academia and R&D.
Symposium
Oxford, UK
The 22nd meeting in the long-standing series brings together the latest advances in light interaction with metal-containing systems.
Symposium
Cambrisge, UK
XIII International Symposium on Macrocyclic and Supramolecular Chemistry will be run in 2017 in conjunction with the Royal Society of Chemistry's biennial ISACS.
CLAN seminar series
CNR Sala riunioni (ed.12, 1° p.) Istituto ISOF-CNR Via Gobetti 101, Bologna
Prof. Angiolina Comotti from the Department of Material Sciences at the University of Milano-Bicocca spoke aboutmolecular rotors and their spinning speed control by chemical stimuli.
CLAN seminar series
CNR Sala riunioni (ed.12, 1° p.) Istituto ISOF-CNR Via Gobetti 101, Bologna
Dr. Christophe Nacci from the Institute of Chemistry, University of Graz in Austria discusses on-surfce synthesis and characterization of molecular nanostructures.
Congress
Santa Margherita di Pula, Cagliari, Italy
Conference
Holderness School 33 Chapel Lane Holderness, NH 03245 United States
Conference will focus on molecules that are designed to change their shape in a controllable and reversible fashion and can be employed as devices that create motion, ultimately paving the way towards the smallest possible entities capable of performing useful work (molecular machines).