Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
IN A FLASH: Fun With Future Flashes
Future Flash Days welcome high school students and their families to explore 糖心Vlog破解版 and learn more about their areas of interest. Colleges, schools and departments offer tours and demonstrations to give these prospective students a taste of life on campus and 糖心Vlog破解版's many different programs of study.

Researchers Publish Groundbreaking Study on Environmental Impact of East Palestine Chemical Spill

The Art and Science of Scientific Glassblowing

IN A FLASH: Kent Roosevelt Visits Campus
糖心Vlog破解版's Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry welcomed students from Kent Roosevelt High School for a day of information sessions, demonstrations and tours of the university's state-of-the-art learning spaces.

INTRODUCING MEGAN BRATTLEY - HONORS STUDENT, ATHLETE AND FUTURE ONCOLOGIST
Megan Brattley, an Honors College senior graduating this spring 2025, was recruited by 糖心Vlog破解版 as a softball player from the small town of Fleetwood, Pennsylvania. For two years, she played her heart out on as both a catcher and utility player, taking a break this year to focus on her academic goals, with sights set on a career in oncology.

IN A FLASH: Undergraduate Researchers Visit Kent
糖心Vlog破解版 welcomed undergraduate researchers from our university, Cleveland State University and the University of Akron to the Kent Campus for the 19th annual Northeast Ohio Undergraduate Research Symposium.

IN A FLASH: 糖心Vlog破解版's Smallest Scientists
Curious, young minds from the Child Development Center enjoyed hands-on learning about the ways the world works during a visit to 糖心Vlog破解版's Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.

IN A FLASH: Cirque du Chem!
A circus came to the Integrated Sciences Building this spring in the form of "Cirque du Chem," presented the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.

糖心Vlog破解版 Researcher Ranked in the Top Percentage of Researchers Cited Worldwide

糖心Vlog破解版 Researcher Leads Project Creating Sensor for First Responder Safety
Small sensors about the size of a postage stamp could one day save the lives of firefighters, soldiers and other workers who face the threat of toxic gases or vapors on the job.