哥伦比亚大学巴纳德学院化学系导师教师师资介绍简介-Michael Campbell

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Michael Campbell


Assistant Professor of Chemistry

Department


Chemistry

Office


Altschul 601
Office Hours:
Wednesday 4:00-5:00pm (ALT 806)
Thursday 12:00-1:00pm (ALT 806)

Contact


212-854-2074

mcampbel@barnard.edu


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Michael G. Campbell was born in 1986 in Pennsylvania. He earned his B.S. in Chemistry in 2008 from Loyola University Maryland, graduating?summa cum laude. While at Loyola he conducted research in organic synthesis as a Hauber Research Fellow, under Prof. Jesse D. More. He earned his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 2014 under Prof. Tobias Ritter, where he worked mainly on the chemistry of palladium in the +III oxidation state. From 2014–2016 he was a postdoctoral fellow at MIT with Prof. Mircea Dinc?, working in the area of electrically conductive metal–organic frameworks (MOFs). In July 2016, he joined the Department of Chemistry at Barnard College as an Assistant Professor.

Postdoctoral Fellowship,Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Advisor: MirceaDinc?
Ph.D.Chemistry, Harvard University
Advisor: Tobias Ritter
M.A.Chemistry, Harvard University
B.S.Chemistry, Loyola University Maryland


The Campbell Group at Barnard focuses on using the tools of synthetic organometallic and inorganic chemistry to address diverse challenges in catalysis and materials science. We work on the design and synthesis of transition metal-based small molecules and materials in order to study their reactivity,as well as fortechnological applications such as sensing.
Research in the Campbell Group is currently supported by grant awards from the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund (ACS PRF), as well as a Barnard College Presidential Research Award.


CHEM BC3271Inorganic Chemistry
CHEM BC3272Advanced Inorganic Chemistry
CHEM BC2012General Chemistry Laboratory
CHEM BC3328Introductory Organic Chemistry Laboratory
CHEM BC3901Senior Thesis Seminar
FYSBBC1474Think Like a Scientist: From Plato to Hawking


Click Here for a Complete List of Publications
Asterisks(*) Indicate Barnard Student Co-Authors
Dinuclear Silver Complexes in Catalysis
T. Elkoush*, N.D. Reich*, M.G. Campbell
Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2021, 60, 22614–22622.
Visible Light Absorption and Long-Lived Excited States in Dinuclear Silver(I) Complexes with Redox-Active Ligands
D.J. Shields, T. Elkoush*, E. Miura-Stempel*, C.L. Mak*, G.-H. Niu, A.D. Gudmundsdottir, M.G. Campbell
Inorg. Chem. 2020, 59, 18338–18344.
Silver(II) and Silver(III) Intermediates in Alkene Aziridination with a Dinuclear Silver(I) Nitrene Transfer Catalyst
T. Elkoush*, C.L. Mak*, D.W. Paley, M.G. Campbell
ACS Catal. 2020, 10, 4820–4826.
Switchable Electrical Conductivity in a Three-Dimensional Metal–Organic Framework via Reversible Ligand n-Doping
H.C. Wentz*, G. Skorupskii, A.B. Bonfim*, J.L. Mancuso, C.H. Hendon, E.H. Oriel, G.T. Sazama, M.G. Campbell
Chem. Sci. 2020, 11, 1342–1346.
Argentophilic Interactions in Solution: An EXAFS Study of Silver(I) Nitrene Transfer Catalysts
C.L. Mak*, B.C. Bostick,N.M. Yassin*, M.G. Campbell
Inorg. Chem.2018, 57,5720.





In The News



Professor Michael Campbell Describes Novel Method of Testing Water for Arsenic in Latest Published Research


November 29, 2021


Professor Michael Campbell Named a 2021 Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar


November 9, 2021


Professor Michael Campbell Publishes New Research on Silver as a Catalyst in Chemical Reactions


June 29, 2021


Chemistry Department Tenure-Track Faculty All Awarded Individual & Collaborative Research Grants


This summer, faculty in Barnard’s Chemistry Department were awarded major federal grants that will support them, individually and collaboratively, as they research a variety of topics.

August 22, 2018