Prof. Colin Raston
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Colin Raston, Ph.D ([email protected]) Professor Clean Technology, College of Science and Engineering Flinders University Adelaide, Australia Colin Raston is a Professor in Clean Technology, at Flinders University. He completed a PhD at the University of Western Australia, and after postdoctoral studies at the University of Sussex he was appointed a lecturer at The University of Western Australia (1981) then to positions as Professor of Chemistry at Griffith University (1988), Monash University (1995), The University of Leeds (2001), and The University of Western Australia (2003). He is a former President, Queensland Branch President, and Chair of the Inorganic Division, of the Royal Australian Chemical Institute (RACI). He has received the RACI’s Green Chemistry Challenge Award, the H.G. Smith Award for the most distinguished contribution to research in chemistry in Australia in the previous ten years, the Burrows Award for distinguished research in inorganic chemistry, and the Leighton Memorial Award for outstanding contributions to the profession. In 2015 he shared the Ig Nobel Prize in Chemistry with colleagues at the University of California, Irvine and the University of Western Australia, in 2016 he was Appointed an Officer in of the Order of Australia, and 2018 he was elected Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science. Prof Raston is former recipient of an Australian Research Council Special Investigator Award, two Senior Research Fellowships and two Australian Professorial Fellowships. His current research covers clean technology and green chemistry, nanotechnology and self-assembly, and is currently on the editorial advisory board of the international journals Green Chemistry, Crystal Growth and Design and Nature’s Scientific Reports. Professor Raston has published over 730 journal articles, a book, chapters in books, and has edited a book. He has a number of patents, with a spin out company with colleagues now ASX listed, and another company launched in 2018, 2D Fluidics, as a joint venture between Flinders University and First Graphene. .