Visiting Seminar Series 2008-2009
- Professor Linda Shimizu, University of South Carolina
 "Porous Materials from Self-assembling Cyclic Ureas"
- Professor Michael Haley, University of Oregon
 "It Takes Alkynes to Make a World - New Methods for the Formation of Annulenes, Cinnolines and Isoindazoles"
- Professor George John, City College of the City University of New York
 "Self-Assembled Soft Materials from Sugar Amphiphiles, and the In Situ Synthesis of Nanoparticles"
- Professor Alan G. Marshall, Florida State University
 "Connections and Luck: The Development of Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance Mass Spectrometry"
- Professor Hilkka Kenttamaa, Purdue University
 "Gas-Phase Reactivity Studies on Organic Polyradicals" (Oesper Symposium Speaker)
- Professor Neil L. Kelleher, University of Illinois
 "FTMS as a Major Driver of Precision Proteomics" (Oesper Symposium Speaker)
- Professor Michael T. Bowers, University of California at Santa Barbara
 "Recent Results from High Resolution Ion Mobility Studies" (Oesper Symposium Speaker)
- Professor Jack Beauchamp, California Institute of Technology
 "Picking the Right Tool for the Job: Probing Biomolecule Structure with Electrons, Protons, Metal Ions and Free Radicals" (Oesper Symposium Speaker)
- Professor Roman A. Zubarev, Uppsala University, Sweden
 "CHON-kin Isotopic Mystery" (Oesper Symposium Speaker)
- Sir Harold Kroto, Florida State University (Nobel Prize for Chemistry 1996)
 "Kentucky Fried Creationism and Other Food for Thought" (Oesper Banquet Speaker)
- Professor Alan G. Marshall, Florida State University
 "Reading Chemical 'Fine Print': The Quiet Revolution of Ultrahigh-Resolution Mass Spectrometry" (Oesper Award Lecture)
- Professor Sapna Deo, IUPUI
 "Luminescence-Based MicroRNA Detection Technologies"
- Professor Frank Schultz, IUPUI
 "Understanding Multielectron Transfers and Other Concerted Chemical Events"
- Professor Andrew Herr, UC, College of Medicine, Dept. of Molecular Genetics, Biochemistry & Microbiology
 "Structural and Biophysical Studies of Receptor Signaling and Cellular Adhesion"
- Professor Teresa Head-Gordon, University of California-Berkeley
 "From Monomer Structure to Polymorphism: Computational and Experimental Studies of the Alzheimer's Abeta Peptide"
- Dr. Juris Meija, Inst. for National Measurement Standards, National Research Council, Canada
 "Atomic Weights of the Elements: Is there anything left for research?"
- Professor Christopher Hadad, Ohio State University
 "Development of a Novel Bioscavenger against Chemical Warfare Agents"
- Professor Dan Mindiola, Indiana University
 "Titanium Alkylidynes"
- Dr. Michael Greig, Pfizer Global Research
 "Biological Mass Spectrometry in Support of Drug Discovery"
- Professor Anne McCoy, Ohio State University
 "Using Vibrational Spectroscopy to Probe H+ Transport in Ion-Water Complexes"
- Professor Alex Demchenko, University of Missouri-St. Louis
 "New Approaches to Expeditious Oligosaccharide Synthesis"
- Professor Cornelia Bohne, University of Victoria (Zimmer Int'l Scholar '04)
 "Controlling Bimolecular Reactions in Supramolecular Systems"
- Professor Manabu Abe, Hiroshima University, Japan (Zimmer Int'l Scholar)
 "Generation of Long-lived Singlet 1,3-biradicals, and Their Related Chemistry"
- Professor Scott Tanner, University of Toronto, Canada
 "A Mass Cytometer for High Throughput Multi-Parameter Analysis of Single Cells"
- Professor Guo-Min Li, University of Kentucky
 "Mechanism of DNA Mismatch Repair"
- Dr. Morris Bullock, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
 "Heterolytic Cleavage of Hydrogen in Metal-Catalyzed Ionic Hydrogenations and the Oxidation of Hydrogen"
- Professor John Straub, Boston University
 "Probing the Principles Governing Protein Aggregation"
- Professor Alessio Accardi, University of Iowa  [sponsored jointly with the Dept. of Molecular & Cellular Physiology]
 "Mechanisms of Ion Binding and Selectivity in the CLC Transporters and Channels"
- Professor Stuart Rowan, Case Western Reserve University
 "Supramolecular Chemistry in Polymeric Systems: From Nanoassemblies to Dynamic Materials"
- Professor James E. Mark, University of Cincinnati
 "Some Interesting things about the Polysiloxanes"