Department of Chemistry, Imperial College London
Former name | Royal College of Chemistry |
---|---|
Established | 1845 |
Head of Department | Professor Oscar Ces[1] |
Faculty | Imperial College Faculty of Natural Sciences |
Staff | 46[2] |
Students | 861[2] |
Location | Imperial College Road, London, United Kingdom 51°29′52″N 0°10′39″W / 51.497708°N 0.177475°W |
Campus | South Kensington White City (research) |
Website | www |
Map | |
The Department of Chemistry is responsible for chemistry teaching and research at Imperial College London. The department is one of the largest in the UK with around 63 academic staff, 10 teaching fellows, 95 postdoctoral research scientists and research fellows and 1150 students, including 240 PhD students,150 MRes students and around 750 students studying undergraduate courses.[3] This community is further supported by over 45 support and administrative staff. The department is based across two sites.
The first is the Chemistry Building along Imperial College Road where students benefits from a dedicated teaching block looking over the Dangoor Plaza and the rejuvenated Queen’s Lawn at South Kensington campus. The second is the Molecular Sciences Research Hub (MSRH), a £170M major new building for Chemistry on the White City Campus which sits at the heart of the White City Innovation District. This 24,000m2 cutting-edge research facility provides state-of-the-art infrastructure for Chemistry and is one of the most advanced chemical facilities in the world with a capacity for 80 groups and >800 researchers including collaborating groups from other departments stimulating connections between the chemical sciences and other disciplines. The MSRH is now home to all research in the Department of Chemistry and is where undergraduate students undergo their final year research projects.
The vision for the Imperial College White City campus is to co-locate academia and business at scale with a view to supporting economic growth and local skills, enterprise and innovation with an impact locally and across the UK. The ethos of the campus is to break down traditional barriers to collaboration and to redefine what partnerships look like and how they operate. This has stimulated a new wave of internal and external SMES to move into the area. The White City Innovation District itself is a fast emerging as a global economic hotspot in science, technology, engineering, mathematics, medicine, business (STEMMB), the arts and media.
In order to support the growth of the White City Innovation District the Department co-established the Deep Tech Network in partnership with Upstream. Upstream is a partnership between Hammersmith and Fulham Council and Imperial College London. The Deep Tech network runs a regular series of events and showcases that aim to foster links between all stakeholders in White City.
The department ranks 9th in the QS 2018 subject world rankings.[4]
History
The origins of the department lie in the Royal College of Chemistry, which was founded in 1845 on Hanover Square, moving the next year to Oxford Street.[5] Its first professor was August Wilhelm von Hofmann, from the University of Giessen. The college was later incorporated into the Normal School of Science as a department, and the school was refounded as the Royal College of Science in 1890.[6][7] In 1907, the Royal College of Science became one of the founding institutions of Imperial College, which joined the University of London, only to leave it and become independent in 2007.
In 2018 the Molecular Sciences Research Hub opened at the college's new White City campus, becoming the new centre for the department's academic research. Teaching will continue at South Kensington, however, students undertake research projects at the new research hub.[8]
Academics
Study
Undergraduate
The department offers three year BSc and four year undergraduate MSci courses.[9] The department has connections with universities in Europe, allowing undergraduate master's students to study-abroad during their course. It also allows students to take a year in industry, and incorporate management or foreign languages into the course. All students graduating with an undergraduate degree from the department are also awarded the Associateship of the Royal College of Science, ARCS.
Postgraduate
The department offers MRes courses in subject specialties[10] as well as taking on doctors students. It offers however no taught postgraduate programmes.
Rankings
The college ranks 9th on the Times Higher Education natural sciences subjects rankings,[11] and the department in particular ranks 9th in the world, and 3rd in the UK after Cambridge and Oxford, on the QS World University Rankings.[4] Domestically, the department ranks 4th in the Complete University Guide's 2019 chemistry rankings.[12]
People
- August Wilhelm von Hofmann, first professor at the Royal College of Chemistry
- Martha Whiteley OBE, one of the inventors of mustard gas (also an alumna of the department)
- Sue Gibson OBE
- Anthony Gerard Martin Barrett FRS, FMedSci (also an alumnus of the department, BSc PhD)
- Lord George Porter OM PRS, 1967 Nobel Prize in Chemistry[13]
Alumni
- Frances Micklethwait MBE ARCS, first researcher into a cure for mustard gas
- Sir Derek Barton BSc ARCS PhD, 1969 Nobel Prize in Chemistry[14]
- Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson BSc ARCS PhD, 1973 Nobel Prize in Chemistry[15]
References
- ^ "Contacts | Faculty of Natural Sciences".
- ^ a b "STATISTICS POCKET GUIDE 2016–17" (PDF).
- ^ "Imperial College - Statistics Pocket Guide" (PDF).
- ^ a b "Chemistry | Top Universities". QS World University Rankings.
- ^ "Royal College of Chemistry". London Remembers.
- ^ "Imperial College". British History Online.
- ^ "Chemistry at Imperial | Faculty of Natural Sciences".
- ^ "Our Future | Faculty of Natural Sciences". Imperial College London.
- ^ "Course Structure and Content | Faculty of Natural Sciences". Imperial College London.
- ^ "MRes Courses | Faculty of Natural Sciences".
- ^ "World University Rankings 2018 by subject: physical sciences".
- ^ "Chemistry - University Subject Tables 2019".
- ^ "Nobel Prizes | Faculty of Natural Sciences". Imperial College London.
- ^ "Derek Barton - Biographical". NobelPrize.org.
- ^ "Geoffrey Wilkinson - Biographical". NobelPrize.org.