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The Chemical Institute of Canada is a Canadian professional umbrella organization for researchers and professionals in the field of chemistry.It was founded in 1921 as the Canadian Institute of Chemistry until it merged with other groups in 1945 under its current name.
Linda Faye Nazar OC FRSC FRS is a Senior Canada Research Chair in Solid State Materials and Distinguished Research Professor of Chemistry at the University of Waterloo.She develops materials for electrochemical energy storage and conversion.
The Chemical Institute of Canada Medal or CIC Medal is the highest award that the Chemical Institute of Canada confers. Awarded annually since 1951, it is given to "a person who has made an outstanding contribution to the science of chemistry or chemical engineering in Canada". [1]
Love joined the California Institute of Technology as National Institutes of Health postdoctoral fellow with Robert H. Grubbs. [5] She studied the reaction mechanism for olefin metathesis. [2] In 2003, Love moved to Canada to start her independent scientific career at the University of British Columbia.
Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences; Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics; Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies; Plasma Physics Laboratory (Saskatchewan) Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies
In February 2017, University Magazine, based in Windsor and Edmonton, started publishing its list of Top 10 universities in Canada. [16] University Magazine surveyed undergraduate and graduate students at 96 Canadian universities, using this information to rank the universities
Upon receiving his PhD in 1971 in Theoretical Chemistry from McGill University, he went to Oxford University as an NRC Postdoctoral Fellow with Charles Coulson at the Mathematical Institute. [2] He returned to Canada as a Killam Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Chemistry at UBC from 1973 to 1975. [2]
Molly S. Shoichet FRS, is a Canadian science professor, specializing in chemistry, biomaterials and biomedical engineering.She was Ontario's first Chief Scientist. [3] [4] Shoichet is a biomedical engineer known for her work in tissue engineering, and is the only person to be a fellow of the three National Academies in Canada.