Profile
Christina Picken
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About Me:
I live with my sister and our cat in Manchester. I am passionate about creating a sustainable future and so I work creating plastics which degrade in the environment. I love riding my bike, canoeing down rivers, getting creative and eating cake!
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Working in science has taken me across the UK and to other parts of the world too. I grew up near Cambridge/Northampton, moved to Reading for my first job, then to London, a few months in Washington DC (US), Uganda and Nepal and now Iβve been in Manchester for 2 years. I work in the UKs largest lab for sustainable research which means I get to think about, talk about and work on creating a sustainable and healthy future for us all.
I love riding my bike across the city but also across the UK on longer bike trips. I live not far from the countryside so I enjoy the thrill of being outdoors (walking, canoeing and caving). I have just begun an art course (learning never stops!) and enjoy getting messy and being creative. And I like cake β who doesnβt!? -
My pronouns are:
She/Her
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My Work:
I work making polymers which are degradable for shampoos!
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Plastics are made of long chains of molecules called polymers. Body creams, shampoos, hair gels and all sorts of products contain polymers and many of them don’t biodegrade once they go down the drain. I design and make biodegradable versions to test if they behave the same way and can be used instead. Sometimes I’m working in a chemistry lab, wearing lab googles and mixing chemicals together to form chemical reactions, and other times I’m making shampoo and trying not to create too many bubbles!
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My Typical Day:
In a morning, I get up around 7am, eat breakfast, feed the cat hers and cycle to work. I spend most of the day working in a chemistry lab, designing new polymers. I stop for lunch with friends at 12, head back to the lab again and leave between 5 and 6 pm.
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I can never get up on my 6 am alarm! I usually wake up around 7am. I feed the cat her breakfast, feed myself some toast and a cup of tea, before cycling to work (15 minutes). When I get to work around 8:30am, I usually have a couple of reactions in the lab to check on and new reactions to start. I get lunch with friends at 12 for an hour. Over a cup of tea, I usually look at some results (did my experiments work or not? Will they be useful in a shampoo?) and respond to emails before heading back to the lab to continue making sure my polymers are clean and dry. I work in a team of 30 people (some are scientists some are not) and we all work on different projects but all get on well together. I spend 70% of my work time in the lab, trying new chemistry reactions or making shampoo and the rest is either analysing data, discussing ideas with other scientists or trying to make our lab more environmentally friendly.Β I usually cycle back from work between 5 and 6pm. Occasionally if Iβm really enjoying myself in the lab I leave a little later.
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What I'd do with the prize money:
I would create an interactive in-person exhibit which focuses on materials β how they are made (the molecules, how products are formed, what they can do (change shape, change colour, transmit electricity) based on materials and most importantly, how they are separated and recycled!
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Education:
My first secondary school was St Peterβs school in Huntingdon. I moved from there just as I finished the year 9 exams and moved to Prince William School, Oundle. Here I completed my GCSE and A-level exams in 2010.
I realised I loved chemistry so attended the University of Reading for my MChem degree and graduated in 2014. I had excellent teachers, mentors and colleagues but new I wanted to keep learning and explore somewhere new.
I wanted to work with medicines, looking at them from a chemistry viewpoint so chose to apply to PhD programme at University College London which focused on improving the side effects of a drug used for a rare lung disease. I was accepted in 2014 and completed in 2018 after 4 fabulous years of learning about the topic as well as how to manage the project and myself! -
Qualifications:
GSCE: Biology, chemistry, physics, PE, Art, maths, English literature, English language, French, Religious education, Citizenship,
AS level: Physics
A-level: Biology, Chemistry, Maths
MChem: Chemistry
PhD: Pharmaceutical Chemistry -
Work History:
My first job was washing pots and pans in a pub kitchen, then I was a school cleaner, then a waitress at a pub which I did whilst still at school, during weekends/holidays.
My first full time job was testing the components of hydrogen fuel cell cars which I did for a year between my university degree. It was lots of fun but I felt it was quite repetitive and I didn’t want to do it forever. Once I finished my degree I worked in the teaching labs for a couple of months, sorting out many years worth of reactions and equipment and helping design lab experiments for students at university and at schools.
I then moved to London for my PhD degree trying to make a drug used for a lung disease have fewer side effects. As part of this I went to Washington DC for 3 months working in a pharmaceutical company. This was the type of work I thought I always wanted to do but after ~2 years I realised I wanted to work in sustainability and tried to take opportunities to change fields.
Having finished my PhD I worked for a friend as a virtual assistant before taking a 6 month job making eye drops which allowed me to travel to Uganda and Nepal training others on how to make the eye drops I created.
I then worked for a small start-up company in London making nanomedicines which reduces side effects of treatments like that used for cancer. During the pandemic we switched to making nanomedicines for COVID treatment.
I knew during my second degree that I cared deeply about sustainability and reducing the effects of climate change. I then moved to Manchester for a job which would allow me to work on this directly and have been happily here ever since! -
Current Job:
Currently I work as a polymer chemist on sustainable formulations. Most of my work is in a lab, mixing solutions together and making new molecules that are either not known to science yet, or I’m trying to make them do something that hasn’t been done yet. I work as part of 30 other scientists all looking at polymer materials whether it’s for bottles, building houses or wind turbines or credit cards. I also do a lot of work trying to make sure our research doesn’t have harmful effects on the environment (increasing recycling, reducing what we’re using, using better equipment).
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Employer:
I work at the University of Manchester in the Sustainable Materials Innovation Hub.
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My Interview
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What did you want to be after you left school?
Medicinal Chemist (making medicines)
Were you ever in trouble at school?
yes - for being too chatty in class
If you weren't doing this job, what would you choose instead?
Firefighter
Who is your favourite singer or band?
Bon Iver
What's your favourite food?
Aubergine dip
If you had 3 wishes for yourself what would they be? - be honest!
1.) I could have multiple careers/jobs 2.) I could have a pet donkey 3.) There would always be cake in my cupboards!
Tell us a joke.
Why can't you trust atoms?
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