Bartosz Szyszko


Bartosz was born in 1986 in Koszalin, Poland. Since 2005, he has been associated with the Faculty of Chemistry at the University of Wrocław, where in 2010 he graduated from biological and organic chemistry. In 2014 Bartosz defended his doctoral dissertation focused on aceneporphyrinoids carried out under the supervision of prof. Lechosław Latos-Grażyński. In 2015 he completed a postdoctoral fellowship in the group of prof. Jonathan Nitschke at the Faculty of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, where he worked on the synthesis of supramolecular capsules using the method of subcomponents self-assembly. Currently, Bartosz is an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Chemistry at the University of Wrocław. 

EDUCATION AND ACADEMIC RESEARCH EXPERIENCE

2023: Associate Professor at the University of Wrocław 

2021: Head of the Organic Supramolecular Chemistry group

2021: Habilitation

2020 – 2024: Vice-Dean for general affairs at the Faculty of Chemistry, University of Wrocław

2017: Head of the Advanced Methods of Synthesis teaching laboratory

2015: Assistant Professor at the University of Wrocław 

2015: Postdoctoral Researcher, Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, UK
Supervisor: prof. Jonathan R. Nitschke

2014: Research Assistant at the Faculty of Chemistry, University of Wrocław

2014: Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Organic Chemistry; Faculty of Chemistry, Wrocław University, Poland
Supervisor: prof. Lechosław Latos-Grażyński

2010: Master of Science in Biological and Organic Chemistry; Faculty of Chemistry, Wrocław University, Poland
Supervisor: prof. Marcin Stępień

HONORS AND AWARDS

W. Kołos scientific award (2022, Polish Academy of Sciences)

Iuvenes Wratislaviae award (2022, Wrocław Division of the Polish Academy of Sciences)

Scholarship for young researchers (2016, Ministry of Science and Education)

Start Scholarship (2013, Foundation for Polish Science)

Max Born Scholarship for Ph.D. students of physics and chemistry (2012, President of Wrocław)

Scholarship for excellent undergraduate students (2009, Ministry of Science and Education)