Pitch Perfectly!

Presenting your PhD project in a professional manner, while wording it in a (semi-)generic fashion that speaks to all members of your audience (and not just those who already know what you’re working on) can be a challenge. But effectively communicating your research is becoming ever more important. Mastering your presentation techniques is very useful for existing and future collaborations, for visibility, and to boost your self-confidence.

As the MCEC Annual Meeting approaches, we would like to give you the opportunity to participate in the following workshop:

Pitch Perfectly!
Crash course pitch & presentation training
3 April at Twente, 4 April at Eindhoven, 6 April at Utrecht
from 12.00-17.30 pm
(Registration is not limited to location. A PhD from UU could, for example, sign up for the workshop at TU/e.)

In this workshop, you will learn the basics of good presentation techniques by zooming in on content, clarity & charisma. Our trainer will help you accentuate your core message, make you aware of the significance of your verbal and non-verbal communication and outline how to get a story across, rather than just facts.

This workshop is for MCEC PhDs and postdocs only, and free of charge. Registration is closed.

MCEC Annual meeting 2017

MCEC Annual meeting 2017

Like every year, the PhD students and Postdocs will present their progress on the research projects they are working on. The program is a combination of pitches/presentations, scientific talks, poster sessions and lectures.

April 19 and 20, 2017

Location
Conferentiehotel Drienerburght
Drienerlolaan 5, 7522 NB Enschede

Program (see more details of the program here>)
Day 1: April 19, 2017

8.30-10.00    Scientific discussions and lab tour on own initiative

10.00-10.25   Welcome and registration

10.25-18.30   Interesting program with lectures, pitch/presentations of the posters, poster sessions, and time for scientific discussions in smaller groups

18.30-20.00   Dinner

20.00-21.00   Evening lecture by Dr. Anne Dijkstra

‘Understanding Science Journalism: balanced reporting and alternative facts’

Day 2: April 20, 2017

8.30-14.30    Follow up on the program with lectures, pitch/presentations of the posters and poster session

14.30-15.00   MCEC School 2017: a presentation about the concept and the contribution of all participants

15.00-15.30   MCEC Poster Prize ceremony

15.30              Closure

Registration is closed.

PhD Excursion: Business development & start-ups

During this excursion you will learn more about business development, you will visit start-up companies at The Gallery and the High Tech Factory.

April 18, 2017

Location
Campus Twente University

Program

10.30-11.00   Welcome and register

11.00-11.45   Presentations: Patents (by Roy Kolkman) and business development (by Rogier de Haan) Kennispark Twente

11.45-12.00   Round table discussion

12.00-12.45   Presentations: start-up companies (ao. by Susan Roelofs and David Fernandez Rivas)

12.45-13.45   Lunch at The Faculty club

13.45-15.15   1st tour: visiting companies at High Tech Factory and The Gallery (Nymux 3D, Lyonix bv., Tide microfluidics)

15.15-15.45   Break

15.45-17.15   2nd tour: visiting companies at High Tech Factory and The Gallery (ao. Solmates and Micronit)

17.30          Travel to location Bowling and diner (on own expense)

Registration is closed.

MCEC meets for Midterm Evaluation

From Sunday 22 January till Tuesday 24 January 2017, the boards, members and the community of MCEC met to discuss the upcoming Midterm Evaluation. 

On Sunday, the Scientific Advisory Board met with the Supervisory Board and MCEC’s tenure track Assistant Professors Ivo Filot, Mathieu Odijk and Freddy Rabouw. Afterwards, the Supervisory Board (SB) had an informal talk with our PhDs Renée Ripken, Stijn Hinterding, Roderigh Rohling, Alvaro Moreno Soto, Anne-Eva Nieuwelink and Aditya Sengar (the last two also being student representatives).

Scientific presentations by members of the Management Team and MCEC PhDs were held on Monday, as well as discussion rounds on MCEC topics Mastering catalytic events, Complex multiscale structures and Mass & heat flows. The poster session afterwards was well-visited and invited to join in conversation.

Tuesday featured scientific presentations by invited speakers Prof. Jacques Magnaudet and Prof. Klavs Jensen, and discussion sessions around our project clusters Nanoreactors, Syngas conversion, Nanobubbles, Biomass conversion, Future methodologies in catalysis & solar fuels and Fluidic systems.

The Scientific Advisory Board was impressed with the obvious synergy within the MCEC community. The dynamics among the PhDs and postdocs, the interest in each other’s research and the genuine ambition to work together created an environment in which the SAB believes the programme can thrive.

Below, you’ll find a photo impression of the Supervisory Board meeting with MCEC PhDs on Sunday, and the poster presentation and drinks on Monday.

 

MCEC researchers receive NWO funding to deploy computational and data science in sustainable energy research

DST and NWO are jointly funding four research projects in the area of computational sciences and data sciences in order to encourage the research collaboration between the Netherlands and India. MCEC researchers are main applicants in three (out of the four) awarded projects.
January 10, 2017

Dr. Laura Filion (Utrecht University) and Prof. Sudeep Punnathanam (Indian Institute of Science)
Design and Synthesis of Novel Catalysts for Energy Applications via Nanoparticle Self-Assembly

Prof. Detlef Lohse (University of Twente) and Prof. Meheboob Alam (Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research)
Dispersed multiphase flows in sustainable energy conversion processes

Prof. Marjolein Dijkstra (Utrecht University) and Prof. Srikanth Sastry (Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research)
Design of novel nanophotonic and plasmonic structures for improved solar cells using reverse engineering

Read more >

MCEC researchers selected for personal membership for ARC CBBC

The first 39 researchers have been selected for personal membership for the Advanced Research Center Chemical Building Block Consortium (ARC CBBC). Among them MCEC researchers: Alfons van Blaaderen, Pieter Bruijnincx, Marjolein Dijkstra, Frank de Groot, Krijn de Jong, Petra de Jongh, Bert Weckhuysen, Niels Deen, Emiel Hensen, Volker Hessel, Hans Kuipers and Detlef Lohse.

Read more >

January 13, 2017

“Feedback of fellow students is truly invaluable”

Master student Bas Salzmann wins CHAINS Poster Prize

Bas Salzmann (1993) is a second-year master student Nanomaterials Science (formerly known as Nanomaterials: Chemistry and Physics). His supervisors are Robin Geitenbeek and Anne-Eva Nieuwelink.

“This CHAINS Poster Prize was an unexpected but welcome surprise. Of course, I put a lot of effort into my poster and talk, making sure that both experts and laymen would find the whole clear, orderly and appealing, but with 250 participants, one doesn’t really assume to win.

“I did notice however during the conference, that my efforts were already paying off: people complimented me on getting this far while yet being ‘only’ a master student, and I was aware of my own enthusiasm every time I spoke about the research. I remember thinking to myself: I’d wish I’d have another year to spend on this. That’s always a good sign, of course, but the interesting talks I had, and the reward in the form of the prize, really confirmed to me that I’m not only passionate for this research but also competent.

“What I like about the project I’ve been working on, is that it’s a combined project from Andries Meijerink’s Condensed Matter & Interfaces, and Bert Weckhuysen’s Inorganic Chemistry & Catalysis. I made use of the knowledge of both groups to synthesize my Y2O3:Ln3+ temperature nanoprobes and deposit them on α-Al2O3, a widely used support material in catalysis. First, the idea was to grow the temperature probes directly in another catalytic support, namely into the mesoporous silicate SBA-15, but with that the analysis turned out to be too intricate. The change to separate the synthesis and deposition of the temperature nanoprobes on α-Al2O3 and the usage of α-Al2O3 as support enabled us to actually characterize the system.

“The poster I presented at CHAINS explained how this system works. Beforehand I made sure to gain feedback on my drafts. I asked my supervisors, naturally, but also and especially my fellow students. Whether it’s for a poster or a presentation, like the one I’m practising now for my thesis presentation, I always benefit from their remarks and opinions since their input is truly invaluable.

“Soon, I’ll be off to Finland, where in February I will start a research internship in the field of Atomic Layer Deposition at the University of Helsinki. After that, I certainly hope that 2017 has a PhD in store for me.”

 

*Editor’s note: Bas held his presentation last Thursday 20 December.

Death and Life of Catalysts: Evgeny Pidko receives ERC Consolidator Grant

Evgeny Pidko has been awarded the ERC Consolidator Grant for his proposal DeLiCAT: Death and Life of Catalysts. In this proposal, his research team will study the fundamental aspects of catalyst activity and deactivation for a number of chemical processes relevant to the fields of catalytic biomass conversion and hydrogen technology, using both state-of-the-art theoretical and experimental approaches.

Pidko: “Most of the ideas that I have are intrinsically stream-lined along the main goals of the MCEC program. Being embedded in its interdisciplinary environment offers a unique opportunity for me and for the new team to look at our research problems from a new directions, and, ultimately, come up with truly innovative solutions.”

Read more about Evgeny Pidko, his research and the ERC Consolidator Grant on the news page of TU/e and the website of NWO (in Dutch).

January 6, 2017

CHAINS Poster Prize for Bas Salzmann

Bas Salzmann, Masterstudent Nanomaterials at Utrecht University who is supervised by Robin Geitenbeek, has won the CHAINS 2016 Poster Prize for his poster on ‘Towards luminescent temperature sensing in catalytic environments using Y2O3:Eu3+/Al2O3 complexes’; a project of Robin Geitenbeek and Anne-Eva Nieuwelink.

MCEC was represented at CHAINS 2016 with several members and PhD students who contributed to the event as chair or speaker, and three MCEC Posters.

A nice piece of information: Robin Geitenbeek happens to be the first winner of the MCEC Poster Prize, at the MCEC Annual Meeting 2016.

Read more on NWO site (Dutch) >

December 9, 2016