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About the Institute

The Pregl Colloquium at the National Institute of Chemistry

The Pregl Colloquium was named after Friderik (Fritz) Pregl, a chemist and medical doctor of Slovenian origin. In 1923 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry “for his invention of the method of micro-analysis of organic substances”.

In this series of lectures we host distinguished scientists from all over the world, working in the field of chemistry and chemistry-related sciences. The lectures are open to a broad scientific communion and are advertised on our webpage, as well as at all research institutions in Ljubljana. The official language of the Pregl colloquium is English. The Colloquium takes place once a month in the Big Lecture Hall, usually on a third Thursday at 1 pm, if not stated otherwise. People interested in meeting the Pregl Lecturer are invited to contact the Pregl Colloquium coordinator, Prof. Dr. Nataša Novak Tušar (natasa.novak.tusar@ki.si).

Videolectures of Pregl's Colloquia: https://videolectures.net/events/preglov_kolokvij

Last ten Pregl colloquiums

Prof. dr. Andrej SaliDepartment of Bioengineering and Therapeutic SciencesUniversity of CaliforniaSan Francisco, US…
Prof. Dr. Herrmann HartmutHead of Atmospheric Chemistry DepartmentLeibniz Institute for Tropospheric ResearchLeipzig,…
Prof. Dr. Marc KoperFaculty of Science, Leiden Institute of ChemistryLeiden University, the Netherlands Lecture…
Prof. Dr. Helena Safavi Department of Biology and Department of BiochemistryUniversity of Utah, Salt Lake City, US …
Dr. Javier MontenegroDepartment of Organic ChemistrySantiago de Compostela UniversitySantiago de Compostela, Spain …
Prof. dr. Antonio RandazzoDepartment of PharmacyUniversity of Naples Federico IINaples, ITALY Lecture title: From…
Prof. Dr. Dorothee KernDepartment of BiochemistryBrandeis University,Waltham, MA, USA Lecture title: The Protein…
Lecture title: Computational Design of the Temperature Dependence of Enzyme Reactions INVITATION
Lecture title: Artificial Intelligence Driven Energy Chemistry: Make AI Do Your Work! INVITATION
Videolectures: Alginate-based polymeric microspheres for immunoprotection of transplanted insulin-producing cells in…
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