Report summary
For University of Arizona Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry in 2015-2026, the graph shows 78 visible PIs and 117 internal PI collaborations. The main research signal is Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology as the leading field (21% of slots across 35 PIs; 35 labels), Molecular Biology as the leading subfield (16% of slots across 30 PIs; 30 labels), and Lipid Membrane Structure and Behavior as the leading topic (3% of slots across 8 PIs; 8 labels). That is a healthy pattern, with enough links to reveal several interpretable groups rather than one undifferentiated component. The most prominent PIs by weighted works are Jeong‐Yeol Yoon (57.5 weighted works; Biosensors and Analytical Detection, Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques). The clearest collaboration lines are Michael F. Brown and Andrey V. Struts (77 shared works, weight 46.4). The strongest breakdown groups are group 1 with 10 PIs, 11 internal connections, weight 77.5, around Materials Chemistry, Polymers and Plastics, Organic Chemistry, led by Jean‐Luc Brédas, Jeffrey Pyun, Jón T. Njardarson; group 2 with 8 PIs, 9 internal connections, weight 48.7, around Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, Pollution, Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine, led by Steven D. Schwartz, Jil C. Tardiff, Jeanne E. Pemberton.
