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Contact:
Darren G. Hamilton
Carr Laboratory, Room G08
413-538-3427

Education:

  • University of Southampton, Ph.D.
  • Royal Holloway College, University of London, B.Sc.

Joined MHC: 1999

"Chemists are now able to pose, and hopefully answer, questions that would have been impossible to tackle in decades past. The range of investigative and creative activity has been immeasurably broadened by the power and sophistication of the tools that we may employ to study structure and behavior. The Mount Holyoke College chemistry department is enviably well equipped and provides many of these technologies for use by students in both the teaching and research laboratories."

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Home > Academics > Faculty > Faculty Profiles > Darren G. Hamilton

Darren G. Hamilton

Associate Professor of Chemistry

Specialization
Synthetic organic chemistry; physical organic chemistry; molecular recognition; materials chemistry

Darren Hamilton works with students on a variety of projects that use the tools of synthetic organic chemistry to prepare molecular systems with designed properties or functions. Some of Hamilton's work may be regarded as fundamental research. For example, he is studying the manner in which two complementary molecular partners bind to one another. These processes can be usefully studied in small model systems, while the answers obtained have significance to the much larger-scale processes of biological recognition.

On the applied research side, Hamilton and his student protégées are preparing molecular systems that can bind and transport, or bind and recognize, a species of interest. Current projects in this area involve the preparation of transport systems for metal ions employed in medical imaging techniques, as well as the development of a prototype molecular construct for carbohydrate recognition. A direct, but unexpected, application of the work on complementary binding has been the development of a new class of liquid crystalline materials (see "Katherine McMenimen '03 and Her Marvelous Molecule," below).

Hamilton recently received a new three-year award from the American Chemical Society's Petroleum Research Fund to continue work previously funded by this agency. The grant will allow Hamilton and his students to build on their early work and create second-generation "designer molecules" for the molecular recognition projects. Additional grants from the Research Corporation (2000) and the Dreyfus Foundation (2001) underpin the research program. His research with undergraduate students has been published most recently in the Journal of Organic Chemistry, Crystal Growth and Design, and the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

News links:

"Katherine McMenimen '03 and Her Marvelous Molecule," Vista, fall 2002

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