3 research outputs found
Seventy-Five Years (1940-2015) of Lehigh University\u27s Chemistry Department
The 75-years 1940 to 2015 have been exciting ones for the Department of Chemistry; new buildings, new programs, energetic young faculty, enhanced research image, and a far broader coverage of Chemistry than our ancestors ever presumed. Five chairs guided the department through its first 75-years but it took 11 chairs (with two of them serving twice) to manage the second 75-years. As one of the Lehigh founding departments in 1865 our first 75-years have already been covered. The reader is directed to a history written by Robert D. Billinger, A History of the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering of Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania (1866-1941) which is available in original in the Lehigh Archives and as an on-line document. This sesquicentennial volume is also available in hardcopy with original illustrations in the archives or on-line
Low‑<i>q</i> Bicelles Are Mixed Micelles
Bicelles are used
in many membrane protein studies because they
are thought to be more bilayer-like than micelles. We investigated
the properties of “isotropic” bicelles by small-angle
neutron scattering, small-angle X-ray scattering, fluorescence anisotropy,
and molecular dynamics. All data suggest that bicelles with a <i>q</i> value below 1 deviate from the classic bicelle that contains
lipids in the core and detergent in the rim. Thus not all isotropic
bicelles are bilayer-like