Faculty Profile for Dr. David Schilter

profile photo for Dr. David Schilter
Dr. David Schilter
Assistant Professor — Chemistry and Biochemistry
CHEM 309
phone: (512) 245-2156

Biography Section

Biography and Education

I was born in Stans, Switzerland (1983) and grew up in Sydney, Australia, where I completed school and attended The University of Sydney. I pursued a Bachelor of Science (Advanced) degree and specialized in chemistry, a subject that aroused my curiosity for why matter is the way it is. It was also a subject that resonated with my creative side, which saw me gravitate towards Professor Len Lindoy and undertake metallo-supramolecular chemistry research. This work culminated in a thesis titled ‘Building Blocks for Supramolecular Architecture: Bis(β-diketonato)copper(ii) Metallocycles’, for which I was awarded First Class Honours and the University Medal (2004). I stayed at the same institution to study for my Doctor of Philosophy under the tutelage of Professor Louis Rendina, with whom I continued my theme of metallo-supramolecular chemistry, this time with a bio-inorganic and analytical flavor. Indeed, my thesis ‘Synthesis and DNA-binding of metallocyclic architectures’ (2009) described synthetic platinum and palladium complexes and their interactions with nucleic acids.
Eager to study catalysis, I joined Professor Thomas Rauchfuss at The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign to study synthetic mimics of hydrogenases and laccases — enzymes that split H2 and O2, respectively (2009–2014). Alongside this organometallic research, I developed a passion for teaching while Lecturer for advanced analytical and inorganic courses. To gain more leadership experience, I served as a Research Scientist in the Center for Multidimensional Carbon Materials (CMCM) at UNIST in South Korea, where I studied carbenes and graphenes alongside Professors Rodney Ruoff and Christopher Bielawski, with whom I won nationally-competitive funds (2014–2016). After helping launch this Center, I joined Springer Nature (2016–2021) and helped launch Nature Reviews Chemistry. Rising from Associate to Senior Editor, I commissioned and edited articles, wrote news stories, prepared artwork, organized conferences, gave writing workshops and provided technical expertise for Nature Catalysis and Nature Communications. With this breadth of chemistry and publishing knowledge, I returned to research by joining Texas State University (2021–), where I am presently Assistant Professor.

Teaching Interests

Analytical chemistry
Inorganic chemistry

Research Interests

Commensurate with my diverse background, my teaching and research interests span supramolecular and organometallic chemistry, catalysis, mass spectrometry, vibrational spectroscopy and carbon materials. I am particularly enamored and experienced with synthetic transition metal complexes that mimic structural or functional aspects of enzymes that activate small molecules like carbon dioxide and methane. Such catalysis research will benefit from new strongly basic ligands, which motivated me to make C-donor systems based on N-heterocycles. Lastly, my passion for supramolecular chemistry and mass spectrometry has spurred me to develop methodologies to characterize reactive metal complexes in the gas phase.

Selected Scholarly/Creative Work

  • Scratching the Surface: An Interdisciplinary Look at Kachina Dolls. TXST Wittliff Collections. May 31, 2023 - Present
  • Schilter, D. (2021). Scalar coupling scales with bonding. Nature Reviews Chemistry, 5(9), 598–598. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41570-021-00320-2
  • Schilter, D. (2021). Discretion is the better part of valence. Nature Reviews Chemistry, 5(7), 445–445. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41570-021-00301-5
  • Schilter, D. (2021). Nickel doesn’t get a slice of the pi. Nature Reviews Chemistry, 5(7), 446–446. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41570-021-00307-z
  • Schilter, D. (2021). Phosphine wins Au after double elimination. Nature Reviews Chemistry, 5(6), 367–367. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41570-021-00287-0

Selected Grants

  • Schilter, David. Active-site models unravel mechanism of enzymatic alkane activation, National Institutes of Health, Federal, $744625. (Funded: August 1, 2023 - June 30, 2027). Grant.
  • Rhodes, Christopher Peter (Principal), Martin, Benjamin (Co-Principal), Schilter, David (Co-Principal), Kerwin, Sean Michael (Co-Principal), Kornienko, Alexander Vladimir (Co-Principal), Peterson, Ryan Loren (Co-Principal), Schwartz, Benjamin F (Co-Principal), Dutton, Jessica (Co-Principal), Ikehata, Keisuke (Co-Principal), Hwang, Sangchul Scott (Co-Principal), Ozbakkaloglu, Togay (Co-Principal). Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry Shared Research and Education Instrument, Texas State University, $259195. (Funded: 2022 - 2023). Grant.
  • Schilter, David. Synthetic Models of Multicopper Oxidases as Electrocatalysts for the Oxygen Reduction Reaction, NSF, Federal, $10000. (Submitted: April 18, 2022, Funded: May 1, 2022 - October 31, 2023). Grant.
  • Schilter, David (Principal). Reduced viologens as redox-active pi-ligands, Texas State University, $8000. (Submitted: October 13, 2021, Funded: February 1, 2022 - May 31, 2023). Grant.

Selected Service Activities

Member
Sustainability Working Group
April 12, 2024-Present
Member
Chemistry and Biochemistry Head of Department Search Committee
December 13, 2023-Present
Editorial Review Board Member
Essential Chem (Taylor & Francis)
August 16, 2023-Present
Reviewer / Referee
RSC Advances
April 22, 2023-Present
Participant
Bobcat Days
October 15, 2022-Present