Other Memberships/Affiliations
Organisation for Women in Science for the Developing World Kenya (OWSD-Kenya)
Kenya Chemical Society
Degrees:
2014
Doctorate Chemical Sciences
The title of my dissertation is, “Experimental and Theoretical Studies of Binding Interactions in Divalent Transition Metal Cation-N-Donor Ligand Complexes: Structures, Sequential Bond Dissociation Energies, Mechanisms and Energetics of Collision-Induced Dissociation.
2005
Master Chemical Sciences
The title of my master’s thesis is, “Search for Biologically Active Substances from Okinawa Marine Organisms: Isolation and Structures of the Compounds which inhibit the Cleavage of the Fertilized Sea Urchin Eggs.”
The title of my undergraduate research project is, “Radical Scavenging Activities of Flavonoids from the Root Bark of Erythrina abyssinica.”
Publications resulting from Research
Holliness Nose, Yu Chen, and M. T. Rodgers. “Energy-Resolved Collision-Induced Dissociation Studies of 1,10-Phenanthroline Complexes of the Late First-Row Divalent Transition Metal Cations: Determination of the Third Sequential Binding Energies.” Journal of Physical Chemistry A, 2013, 117(20), 4316-4330.
Holliness Nose and M. T. Rodgers. “Energy-Resolved Collision-Induced Dissociation Studies of 2,2′-Bipyridine Complexes of the Late First-Row Divalent Transition Metal Cations: Determination of the Third Sequential Binding Energies.” ChemPlusChem Journal, 2013, 78, 1109-1123.
Holliness Nose and M. T. Rodgers. “Influence of the d Orbital Occupation on the Structures and Sequential Binding Energies of Pyridine to the Late First-Row Divalent Transition Metal Cations: A DFT Study.” Journal of Physical Chemistry A, 2014, 118, 8129-8140.
Holliness Nose, Doctoral Dissertation, Wayne State University, 2014 Dissertation Title: “Experimental and Theoretical Studies of Binding Interactions in Divalent Transition Metal Cation-N-Donor Ligand Complexes: Structures, Sequential Bond Dissociation Energies, Mechanisms and Energetics of Collision-Induced Dissociation.”
Holliness Nose, Master of Science Thesis, University of the Ryukyus, 2005 Thesis Title: “Search for Biologically Active Substances from Okinawa Marine Organisms: Isolation and Structures of the Compounds which Inhibit the Division of the Fertilized Sea Urchin Eggs.”
Holliness Nose, Bachelor of Science Project Report, University of Nairobi, 2002 Undergraduate Research Topic: “Scavenging Activities of Flavonoids from the Root Bark of Erythrina Abyssinica.”
43rd National Convention of the South African Chemical Institute
2025
Mini-African School on Electronic Structure Methods and Applications
2025