Creighton chemistry professor Kayode Oshin, PhD, and student Chris LeWarne work with an Inert Glovebox, an instrument that is used to handle air-sensitive compounds. The atmosphere inside the Inert Glovebox is ultra-pure inert nitrogen gas.
CREIGHTON UNIVERSITY
Kayode Oshin, PhD, is an assistant professor of inorganic chemistry at Creighton. He selected several freshman students to assist in his research, which is centered around organometallic chemistry.
CREIGHTON UNIVERSITY
Front row, from left: Chris LeWarne, Katie Sandquist, Ellen Erie, Isabel Bazley. Back row: Garrett Feiereisel, Jack Peterson and Kayode Oshin, PhD. These students all began working wth Oshin when they were freshmen. They are standing by a Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectrometer, which is used to confirm the successful synthesis of compounds.
Creighton chemistry professor Kayode Oshin, PhD, and student Chris LeWarne work with an Inert Glovebox, an instrument that is used to handle air-sensitive compounds. The atmosphere inside the Inert Glovebox is ultra-pure inert nitrogen gas.
Kayode Oshin, PhD, is an assistant professor of inorganic chemistry at Creighton. He selected several freshman students to assist in his research, which is centered around organometallic chemistry.
Front row, from left: Chris LeWarne, Katie Sandquist, Ellen Erie, Isabel Bazley. Back row: Garrett Feiereisel, Jack Peterson and Kayode Oshin, PhD. These students all began working wth Oshin when they were freshmen. They are standing by a Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectrometer, which is used to confirm the successful synthesis of compounds.