International  Center  for  Isotope  Effects  Research

Nanjing University

Three positions open at ICIER

  We at the International Center for Isotope Effects Research (ICIER), Nanjing University, are actively recruiting new faculty members to join our dynamic team. We seek candidates for three distinct positions, each focusing on the exploration and application of isotope effects:

  1. A noble-gas specialist with robust analytical skills. This position offers flexibility, available at the rank of research associate, technical staff (permanent), or tenure-track/tenured professor, contingent upon the candidate's qualifications.

  2. A physical chemist, eligible for appointment at the rank of tenure-track assistant professor.

  3. A molecular physiologist, also eligible for appointment at the rank of tenure-track assistant professor.

ABOUT US

  ICIER is a cross-college and cross-discipline research hub. It is currently based off and growing out of the College of Earth Sciences and Engineering at Nanjing University. All of our faculty members are affiliated with different colleges in Nanjing University, including but not limited to Earth Sciences, Planetary Sciences, Chemistry, Environmental Sciences, Geography and Oceanography, Atmospheric Sciences, Medical School, and Life Sciences. 

Miyamoto, C., Iizuka, Y., Matoba, S., Hattori, S. and Takahashi, Y., 2022. Gypsum formation from calcite in the atmosphere recorded in aerosol particles transported and trapped in Greenland ice core sample is a signature of secular change of SO2 emission in East Asia. Atmospheric Environment, 278, p...
Yan, H., Peng, YB., Bao, HM. Isotope fractionation during capillary leaking in an isotope ratio mass spectrometer. Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, v. 36, no. 11, e9290.
Han, T., Peng, YB., Bao, HM. Sulfate-limited euxinic seawater facilitated Paleozoic massively bedded barite deposition. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 582: 117419.
Ma, HR., Shen, B., Lang, XG., Peng, YB. et al. Active biogeochemical cycles during the Marinoan global glaciation. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 321: 155-169.