24 May, 2023
The MacDiarmid Institute is delighted to announce that three new Independent Postdoctoral Fellowships have been awarded. All three were domestic candidates.
The call for Independent Postdoctoral Fellowships took place in late 2022, with the requirement for candidates to be supported by a MacDiarmid Institute host Principal or Associate Investigator at one of the MacDiarmid Institute partner organisations and that research proposals aligned with at least one of the MacDiarmid Institute research programmes (Catalytic Architectures, Future Computing, Mātauranga Māori and Reconfigurable Systems).
Dr Caitlin Casey-Stevens completed both her undergraduate and PhD study at the University of Otago. Dr Casey-Stevens' PhD research, working with Principal Investigator Associate Professor Anna Garden, used computational chemistry to understand the electrocatalytic reduction of nitrate on copper palladium nanoparticles. This Independent Postdoctoral Fellowship gives Dr Casey-Stevens the opportunity to work with Associate Investigator Associate Professor Franck Natali at Te Herenga Waka - Victoria University of Wellington, to investigate the formation of ammonia on rare earth species.
Under host Associate Professor Natali, Dr Casey-Stevens will be working in alignment with the Towards Low Energy Tech - Hardware for Future Computing research programme.
Fascinated by protein self-assembly, Dr Amy Yewdall organises nano-scale proteins in space and time to not only better understand these systems within disease contexts, but also to enhance protein function and innovate new technologies. The MacDiarmid Institute Independent Postdoctoral Fellowship supports her research on combining enzymes networks into droplets to capture carbon into useful precursor molecules.
Under host Principal Investigator, Professor Renwick Dobson, at the University of Canterbury, Dr Yewdall will be working in alignment with the Towards Zero Waste - Reconfigurable Systems research programme.
Dr Bicheng (Amy) Zhu is currently a research fellow at the School of Chemical Sciences, the University of Auckland. She received her PhD degree under the supervision of Principal Investigator, Professor Jadranka Travas-Sejdic, in 2017 at the University of Auckland. Before she joined the University of Auckland as a research fellow in 2019, she worked in a New Zealand start-up company for 1.5 years. She received her Postgraduate Certificate in Commercialisation and Entrepreneurship funded by the MacDiarmid Institute Alumni Business Scholarship at the University of Auckland in 2020. With the support of the MacDiarmid Institute Independent Postdoctoral Fellowship, Dr Zhu aims to develop metal-free, eco-friendly and cost-effective heterogeneous graphene-based catalysts for the electroreduction of CO2.
Under host Professor Travas-Sejdic, at the University of Auckland, Dr Zhu will be working in alignment with the Towards Zero Waste - Reconfigurable Systems research programme.