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German chemist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Katharina Landfester is a German chemist who is a professor at the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research. Her research considers the physical properties of droplets, polymerisation in emulsion and the synthesis of nanoparticles.
Katharina Landfester | |
---|---|
Nationality | German |
Alma mater | Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research |
Scientific career | |
Institutions | |
Thesis | Synthese und Charakterisierung von Kern-Mantel-Latices mit Elektronenmikroskopie und Festkörper-NMR (1995) |
Website | Landfester Group |
Landfester studied chemistry at the Technical University of Darmstadt and graduated in 1993.[1] During her undergraduate degree she was a research intern at the École européenne de chimie, polymères et matériaux (then Ecole d’Application des Hauts Polymères). She joined the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research as a graduate student, where she worked with Hans W. Spiess on the characterisation of polymers using solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance. She moved to the United States as a postdoctoral researcher, where she joined Lehigh University. She returned to Germany, where she joined the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces and oversaw the emulsion group.[citation needed]
Landfester joined the University of Ulm as a full professor and head of the Department of Organic Chemistry. Whilst at the university, she started to explore materials for biomedical applications, with a focus on better understanding the interactions of nanoparticles with cellular compartments.[2] By 2008 she had been appointed director of the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research.
Landfester has studied colloids with precisely controlled physical properties.[3] Colloids are particles suspended in a liquid, and can permit the encapsulation of therapeutic and self-healing agents as well as the creation of specific nanostructures.[3] She is interested in the creation of protocells – vesicular structures that are generally considered the minimal units of synthetic biology – from self-assembled block copolymers.[4] These block copolymers contain permeable nanocontainers that can act as cell-like functions.[4]
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