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Research quality
The research in the evaluated period is of a high quality, and was disseminated as a
high number of good to excellent papers in appropriate and well-recognised
international journals in the field. However, considering the
level of funding and the
size of the unit in senior researcher FTEs, the output in the evaluated period is low.
The unit is internationally well-recognised, as reflected in numerous conference
invitations and the high number of incoming postdoctoral researchers from
Europe.
Research environment
The available in-house infrastructure is adequate, although currently the organisation
for handling and maintaining heavy instruments is not to the
full satisfaction to the
unit head. More advanced instrumentation is available on campus or elsewhere in the
Helsinki area, but the unit, as was stated in the interview, does not often use these
facilities.
Research networking and interaction
The unit participates in national graduate schools, and has initiated a successful Tekes
collaborative programme for methods development involving the methods-oriented
synthetic organic chemistry groups in Finland as academic partners. The unit is active
in the Nordic arena (NordForsk programme on selective synthesis) and has been
involved in several COST actions in the evaluated period.
The international network
of the head of unit is impressive, and the second professor holds several commissions
of trust. The number of papers with non-departmental (national and international)
co-authors is still low. To some extent, this reflects the tradition in the field of
methods-oriented organic synthesis.
Recommendations
Organic synthesis in a method-development perspective
is important for organic
chemistry and related disciplines in Finland, including the pharmaceutical and
biotechnological industry. For enhanced viability of this direction in Finland and
within AU, opportunities for novel themes that increase diversity by complementing
the current main direction should be supported.
In
addition, the panel recommends elements of applied organic chemistry, with
in-house or dedicated external collaborative projects for screening and developing
applications for the products. However, this should not be implemented at the
expense of the core themes of fundamental organic chemistry. Such a development of
the unit will be particularly important in order to keep the “technology”
label visible
in the new AU structure.
4.7 Aalto University, Physical Chemistry
Overview
The unit is a small unit within the Department of Chemistry, consisting of one
professor and a total of roughly 15 persons of which ten are PhD students. A new
chair within the group was filled in 2010, which will open
a new research direction
within computational chemistry. The external funding of the unit amounts to 60 per
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cent of the budget and it is obtained from a broad range of sources and includes
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