Nuno Maulide (born 1979, Lisboa, Portugal), is a Portuguese chemist and scientist, currently professor of organic chemistry at the University of Vienna, as well as a science-related writer and speaker.[1] He is also an amateur pianist.[2] Son of a Mozambican father and a São Toméan mother, who were physicians, he was the first black professor at the institution in over six centuries of existence.[3] He is also involved in science divulgation and the popularization of chemistry, especially for children.[4][5][6][7][8]
Biography
Nuno Maulide was born in Lisbon in 1979, son of a couple of medical doctors who were born in Portuguese Africa.[9] His father, Ibraimo Maulide, was born in the then territory of Portuguese Mozambique and his mother, Ermelinda Xavier Daniel Dias Maulide, was born in the then territory of Portuguese São Tomé and Príncipe. They met each other while they were studying medicine at the Medical School of the University of Coimbra, in Portugal, after the Carnation Revolution of 1974 and the eventual independence of the African territories where they were born.[10]
In 2007, he obtained his PhD under the supervision of Prof. Istvan Marko, working on the application of functionalized orthoesters in organic synthesis.[12] He then moved to Stanford University for a post-doctoral stay in the group of Prof. Barry Trost.[13] Nuno Maulide started his independent career in 2009, when he was appointed group leader at the Max-Plank-Institut für Kohlenforschung in Mülheim an der Ruhr.
Maulide lives in Vienna with his wife, a pharmacologist. He is an avid piano player and has employed his talent as a pianist in his public-speaking presentations about science themes.[9][20] Nuno Maulide gave concerts on various occasions.[21][22] Notably, he was finalist in the 2012 International Amateur Piano Competition held in Manchester.[23] He was also finalist and fourth place at the International Piano Competition for Outstanding Amateurs in Paris 2013.
Awards
Lhoist R&D Prize (2005)
Best oral communication at the YoungChem (2005)
Best oral communication at the Frühjahrssymposium (2006)