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  1. Dominic Wright. Professor, Linköping University. Verified email at ifm.liu.se - Homepage. Evolutionary Genetics Quantitative Genetics Sexual Selection Behaviour. Articles Cited by Public access. Title. Sort. Sort by citations Sort by year Sort by title. Cited by. Cited by. Year;

  2. Professor Dominic Wright | Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry. Professor of Inorganic Chemistry. The systematic assembly of inorganic molecules and materials is a major challenge for the future, in the development of new materials and catalysts.

  3. wrightgroupcambridge.wixsite.com › homeWright Group Cambridge

    Prof Dom Wright. Members. Current Research. Publications. Contact. Internal. The Wright Group's research interests are firmly focused on inorganic synthesis and materials chemistry.

  4. 185K Followers, 314 Following, 62 Posts - @dominicjwright on Instagram: "Listen to my music below x".

  5. Professor Dominic Wright From Molecules to Materials The art of synthetic inorganic chemistry is still alive and thriving in many important areas of modern chemistry, especially in the field of materials.

  6. Dom Wright (@dominicjwright) on TikTok | 36.8M Likes. 1.2M Followers. Working on original music! Go check out my insta!Watch the latest video from Dom Wright (@dominicjwright).

  7. Teaching interests. Teaches Part IB and Part II Chemistry Tripos. Degrees MA, PhD Research interests Main group metal organometallics.

  8. Associate professor Dominic Wright, Ph.D., is an evolutionary biologist specializing in domestication, feralization and the genetic basis of animal behavior.

  9. Dominic Wright obtained his first degree at Strathclyde University in Glasgow in 1986 in Chemistry. He then did his Ph.D. in Cambridge under (the late) Ron Snaith in 1989 before and moving on to a College Research fellowship at Gonville and Caius College in Cambridge.

  10. The development of new, well-defined synthetic routes which allow the logical assembly of a broad range of main group and transition metal compounds, many of which have been almost unexplored previously and yet have important future applications in materials science and catalysis.