PHOTONANO26 is a joint scientific meeting organized by the SP2P and Nanoscience subdivisions of the French Chemical Society (SCF), dedicated to photosciences, nanomaterials, and light–matter interactions across scales.
The conference will also serve as the Annual Scientific Meeting of SP2P (SP2P’26).
The conference will be held in the heart of Paris, at the UFR de chimie de Paris Cité, Amphi Buffon, 15 rue Hélène Brion 75013 Paris.
It will begin at 13:30 on Monday, May 11, 2026, and end at 13:00 on Wednesday, May 13, 2026.
The scientific program will feature plenary lectures, invited talks, contributed oral presentations, and poster sessions, with particular attention given to early-career researchers and PhD students.
One of the objectives of PHOTONANO26 is to foster interactions between established researchers and early-career scientists (PhD students and postdoctoral fellows). In this context, we emphasize that registration is free of charge for PhD students and postdoctoral researchers who are members of the SCF (Société Chimique de France). We warmly encourage you to join the SCF if you are not yet a member.
We are also pleased to announce that the first 10 registered PhD students or postdoctoral researchers who are not SCF members will benefit from free registration, thanks to the support of the PEPR LUMA program (limited to one participant per laboratory and subject to the submission and acceptance of an abstract for either a poster or an oral presentation).
Do not wait to register on the PHOTONANO26 website to take advantage of this opportunity to present your research and to discover the latest advances in photochemistry and nanoscience in France.
PHOTONANO26 aims to bring together researchers from photochemistry, photophysics, and nanoscience to foster cross-disciplinary exchanges and new collaborations. Contributions rooted in either photochemistry or nanoscience are welcome, with a strong emphasis on approaches that bridge these communities.
Topics include (non-exhaustive):
photochemistry, photophysics, photocatalysis, plasmonics, nanomaterials, spectroscopy, modeling and simulation, and related areas.
Join us to present your latest results, exchange ideas, and explore new scientific synergies at the interface of light and nanoscience.