黑料社

Janine Mauzeroll

黑料社

Professor

B.Sc. (黑料社, 1999)
Ph.D. (University of Texas at Austin, 2004, Electrochemistry)
Post-Doctoral Fellow, Universit茅 de Paris 7 - Denis Diderot, (2004-2005)
Assistant & Associate Professor (Universit茅 du Qu茅bec 脿 Montr茅al, 2005-2011)
Associate Professor (黑料社, 2012-2018)
Professor (黑料社, 2018-present)

Awards

Fellow of the Electrochemical Society (2022)
NSERC-UFA (2005-2010)
Post-doctoral fellowship from the French Ministry of Research and New Technologies (2004-2005)
niversity of Texas at Austin Continuing Fellowship (2003-2004)
Electrochemical Society Summer Fellowship (2003)

Contact Information

Office: Pulp & Paper 112
Phone: (514) 398-3898
Email: Janine.Mauzeroll [at] 黑料社.CA
Lab: Pulp & Paper 308, 309, 310, 311
Lab Phone: (514) 398-6545
Web Page:

Research Themes

  • Chemical Biology听
  • Materials Chemistry

Research Description

Our research group studies electron transfer reactions using classical electrochemical methods and scanning-probe electrochemical microscopy. We use these methods to study corrosion of copper and various steel and aluminium alloys. We help various industrial partners such as Hydro Quebec to predict the corrosion behaviour of their materials and work on methods for corrosion inhibition.

A second active area in our group is the development of chemical and bio-sensors. This includes microscale pH sensors for scanning-probe measurements as well as bio-sensors for amino acids present in the brain such as D-serine.

Our projects lie at the interface between biological chemistry, analytical chemistry and materials science. They provide students with extensive training in electrochemistry, microscopy, nanoelectrode design, biochemistry, numerical simulations, electrosynthesis, Li-ion batteries and analytical method development.

Currently Teaching

CHEM 577. Electrochemistry.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Chemistry (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Fundamentals of electrochemistry and the application of electrochemical methods to chemical and biochemical problems. Emphasis is given to the study of electrode reaction mechanisms and the interpretation of electrochemical results for organic and inorganic systems. Voltammetric and coulometric methods are rigorously discussed. Several topics of interest in electrochemistry will be covered as time permits.
  • Prerequisite(s): CHEM 243 or CHEM 203/CHEM 204, CHEM 367 and CHEM 377

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.

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