q&more
My watch list
my.chemie.de  
Login  

Author

Kristoffer Thom

Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, Institut für Physikalische Chemie II

Kristoffer Thom

Kristoffer Thom, born in 1993, studied chemistry at the Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf, where he completed his bachelor thesis in the group of Rainer Weinkauf on mass spectrometry of peptides. For his master thesis he joined the group of Peter Gilch, investigating novel emitters for OLED applications and continuing this work since 2017 as part of his PhD studies.

Facts, background information, dossiers

  • organic light-emitt…

Other articles by this author

All articles

More about Universität Düsseldorf

  • News

    A New Tool for Cryo-Electron Microscopy

    Researchers at Forschungszentrum Jülich and Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf led by Prof. Dr. Carsten Sachse are using cryo-electron microscopy, or cryo-EM for short, to make biomolecules visible at the atomic level. In a paper now published in the journal Nature Methods, they present a ... more

    DNAzymes – how active DNA molecules with therapeutic potential work

    DNAzymes are precision biocatalysts that destroy unwanted RNA molecules. However, major obstacles to their use in medicine remain. Together with Jülich Research Centre (FZJ) and the University of Bonn, a research team from Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf (HHU) has investigated with ato ... more

    "Immortality protein" fires up the cell's power plants

    The aging researchers Prof. Judith Haendeler from the Medical Faculty and the molecular biologist Prof. Joachim Altschmied from the Department of Biology together with their teams have shown for the first time in the cardiovascular system that Telomerase Reverse Transcriptase (TERT) within ... more

  • q&more articles

    Surprisingly simple molecules as potential OLED-Emitters?

    Organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) are presently conquering the market for displays of smartphones and TVs. They also have a great potential in lighting applications. Current devices for the blue part of the visible spectrum lag behind their green and red counterparts in terms of efficie ... more

  • Authors

    Prof. Dr. Peter Gilch

    Peter Gilch, born 1970, studied chemistry at the University of Konstanz before receiving his PhD in 1999 from the Technical University Munich. He then joined the Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich for his Habilitation (2004) at the Lehrstuhl für BioMolekulare Optik. Since 2009 he has been ... more

q&more – the networking platform for quality excellence in lab and process

The q&more concept is to increase the visibility of recent research and innovative solutions, and support the exchange of knowledge. In the broad spectrum of subjects covered, the focus is on achieving maximum quality in highly innovative sectors. As a modern knowledge platform, q&more offers market participants one-of-a-kind networking opportunities. Cutting-edge research is presented by authors of international repute. Attractively presented in a high-quality context, and published in German and English, the original articles introduce new concepts and highlight unconventional solution strategies.

> more about q&more

q&more is supported by:

 

Your browser is not current. Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 does not support some functions on Chemie.DE