She joined the faculty of the University of Michigan in 2007 as an assistant professor of Chemistry and Macromolecular Science and Engineering. She became an Arthur F. Thurnau professor in September 2013, and a professor for the Howard Hughes Medical Institute in 2014.[4]
Scientific career
McNeil's lab at the University of Michigan is known for providing mechanistic understanding to the catalyst transfer polymerization process, helping to show that the likely intermediate is a catalyst-polymer π-complex,[5] but the lab has a diverse focus.
For her work on conjugated polymers, there has been considerable focus on expanding the use of catalyst transfer polymerization to make polymers of novel or hard-to-reach architectures (such as conjugated gradient copolymers[6] or insulating-conducting block copolymers[7]) and for studying the properties of new conjugated polymers[8] or new blends of known polymers in solar cells to improve their performance.[9]
Another focus has been on molecular gelation; McNeil has published molecular gels as sensors of many harmful or hard to detect compounds. This is with the underlying assumption that it is easier to determine if a gel has formed (since it will go from a flowing solution to a gel that resists flow) rather than alternatives, such as if a solution has changed color (which can be difficult to discern if the analyte is strongly colored). McNeil's lab has produced gel-based sensors for mercury ions,[10]nitrite ions,[11] explosives,[12]enzymes,[13] and lead ions,[14] which gel when the analyte is present. Many of the gels outperform current sensors for the same materials in sensitivity and in accuracy.
Awards
McNeil was one of the first class of Beckman Scholars, receiving an award from the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation in 1998.[15] McNeil was also selected for a Beckman Young Investigators Award in 2009.[16]
^Smith, Mitchell; Leone, Amanda; Zimmerman, Paul; McNeil, Anne (9 December 2016). "Impact of Preferential π-Binding in Catalyst-Transfer Polycondensation of Thiazole Derivatives". ACS Macro Lett. 5 (12): 1411–1415. doi:10.1021/acsmacrolett.6b00886. PMID35651203.
^Veits, Gesine; Carter, Kelsey; Cox, Sarah; McNeil, Anne (2 September 2017). "Developing a Gel-Based Sensor Using Crystal Morphology Prediction". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 138 (37): 12228–12233. doi:10.1021/jacs.6b06269. PMID27598826.