SSRLUO 2012 Executive Committee Members

Charter | Committee Meetings | Meeting Minutes | SSRLUO Activism


Committee members from 1995-2011


Jordi Cabana 
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 1 Cyclotron Rd, MS: 66-3, Berkeley, CA 94720
Jordi Cabana joined LBNL as a Research Scientist in 2008. He moved to the US in 2005 to join Prof. Clare P. Grey’s group at the State University of New York at Stony Brook as a Postdoctoral Research Associate, after completing his Ph.D. in Materials Science at the Institute for Materials Science of Barcelona in Spain in 2004. Currently, Jordi's research work at LBNL focuses on the design and characterization of materials for electrochemical energy storage, with emphasis placed on the understanding of the fundamental mechanisms of reaction. He has extensively used long range (X-ray and neutron diffraction) and short range (X-ray absorption spectroscopy, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance) characterization techniques, both in situ and ex situ, to probe crystal and electronic structure features of a variety of materials. He has performed some of these experiments at SSRL, ALS and NSLS. More recently, Jordi has leveraged technical developments in nanoscale chemical imaging to investigate kinetic and thermodynamic factors that control redox phase transformations in single particle and their ensembles. As a member of the UEC, Jordi would exploit his profile as an outsider to the synchrotron community to ensure that SSRL's activities remain relevant to important technological fields. He will also assist in efforts to ensure that users can conduct productive experiments and that good feedback exists between them and SSRL management.
Elyse Coletta
Stanford University, Dept. of Engineering, Stanford, CA 94305
Stanford University, Dept. of Engineering, Stanford, CA 94305 Originally from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Elyse completed her B.S. with a double major in Chemical Engineering and Psychology from Carnegie Mellon University in 2009. Between 2007 and 2009 she worked on catalyst related projects at Exxon Mobil as an intern three different times. Her undergraduate research project involved synthesizing metallic nanoparticles. Currently she is a 4th year Ph.D. student in the Chemical Engineering Department at Stanford University. Her graduate research involves synthesizing and characterizing materials for fuel cell membrane applications, and she is currently funded by a NDSEG fellowship.
Serena DeBeer (Past Chair)
Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853 / Max Planck Society, Germany
Serena DeBeer is an Assistant Professor in the Chemistry and Chemical Biology Department at Cornell University. She holds a B.S. from Southwestern University and a Ph.D. from Stanford University, and spent several years as a staff scientist at SSRL. Her research focuses on the development and application of synchrotron spectroscopies to understand fundamental questions in biological and chemical catalysis.
Lisa Dunn (SSRL Liason)
SSRL, User Research Administration, 2575 Sand Hill Rd., Menlo Park, CA 94025
Lisa has been continuously employed at SSRL since 1986, and has managed the administration of protein crystallography experiments since 2000. Lisa earned her Bachelor of Science degree from San Jose State University.
Paul Evans
University of Wisconsin, Materials Science and Engineering, Madison, WI 53706
Paul Evans's research group focuses on the development and application of microscopy and scattering techniques to physical problems associated with emerging electronic materials, including complex oxide ferroeletrics and multiferroics as well as organic and inorganic semiconductor interfaces. Particular areas of interest with respect to x-ray science are in time-resolved and ultrafast probes and the incorporation of ultrafast time resolution into scattering techniques yielding nanometer-scale spatial resolution. Evans received PhD and SM degrees from Harvard University (Applied Physics), a BS degree in Engineering Physics from Cornell Univeristy, and was a postdoctoral researcher at Bell Labs.
Colleen Hansel (SSRL UEC Vice Chair)
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Dept. of Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry, Woods Hole, MA 02543-1050
Colleen is an Associate Scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and was previously an Associate Professor at Harvard University. The foundation of her research is metal biogeochemistry and microbe-mineral interactions. Colleen conducted her graduate work at Stanford University with Scott Fendorf exploring microbial mediated Fe mineral transformations. She continued her research at Stanford as a postdoc, where she identified novel mechanisms of microbial Mn(II) oxidation and Mn oxide formation. Currently, Colleen’s research group continues to explore the mechanisms of microbially mediated metal (e.g., Fe, Mn, Hg) cycling and mineralization and the subsequent impact of those transformations on the ecology and health of microbial populations. Colleen has been a user at SSRL since 1998 and has also conducted research at ALS and APS.
Sarah Hayes (Chair)
US Geological Survey, Soil, Water and Environmental Science, 345 Middlefield Rd., Menlo Park, 94025
Sarah Hayes is currently a Mendenhall postdoctoral fellow at the US Geological Survey in Menlo Park. She performed her Ph.D. research at the University of Arizona with Dr. Jon Chorover on the speciation of toxic metals in arid mine tailings. She gave a talk on the applications of microprobe spectroscopy to environmental scienceAt the 2009 SSRL user meeting. Her current work at the USGS with Andrea Foster and Laurie Balistrieri involves studying the sorption mechanism of tellurium (used in solar panel manufacture) to iron oxides and tellurium speciation in various geomedia. Her current research interests are focused on understanding the link between toxic metal speciation in geomedia and their associated risks to human and ecosystem health.
Katherine A. Kantardjieff (Ex Officio NUFO) 
CSU San Marcos, College of Science and Math, San Marcos, CA 92096
Katherine Kantardjieff is the dean of the College of Science and Mathematics at California State University San Marcos. She was a professor and chair of the department of chemistry at California State Polytechnic University in Pomona. She also was director of the Keck Foundation Center for Molecular Structure at the university. Prior to joining the faculty at Cal Poly in 2009, she taught at California State University Fullerton for more than two decades. She is chair of the National User Facility Organization (NUFO) and the United States National Committee for Crystallography at the National Academy of Sciences. Dean Kantardjieff is a graduate of the University of Southern California. She holds a master’s degree and a Ph.D. in physical chemistry from the University of California Los Angeles.
Chris Kim (Ex officio SNUG)
Chapman University, Physical Sciences, One University Ave., Orange, CA 92866
Assistant Professor in the Department of Physical Sciences at Chapman University in Southern California. He conducted his graduate work at Stanford University under Gordon Brown and continued his research as a post-doc at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory with Glenn Waychunas. He has been a user at SSRL since 1996 and has also conducted research at the ALS and APS. Currently, he is studying trends in the speciation, concentration, and distribution of heavy metals in mine wastes as well as the mechanisms and extent of metal uptake and (co-)precipitation with iron oxyhydroxide nanoparticles. Chris is also involved in increasing opportunities for undergraduate students to conduct research at national synchrotron facilities.
Cathy Knotts (SSRL Liaison)
SSRL, User Research Administration, 2575 Sand Hill Rd., Menlo Park, CA 94025
Manager of User Research Administration since November 2000. Prior to that time, Cathy managed administrative operations and corporate communications in the biotechnology industry. She was a management analyst for National Institute on Aging/National Institutes of Health before moving to Northern California in 1994. Cathy received a B.S. from the University of Maryland majoring in Health Science and Policy.
Stosh Kozimor
Los Alamos National Laboratory, C-NR, Los Alamos, NM 87545
Stosh Kozimor is a staff member at LANL. He conducted his graduate research with Professor William J. Evans at the University of California, Irvine in inorganic and organometallic synthesis, and his work was recognized in 2005 by the UCI Department of Chemistry Joan Rowland Award for meritorious performance in graduate studies. In the same year, he was offered a Director's Fellowship from LANL to continue his studies in actinide science. However he deferred, and accepted a position at the University of California with Professor Jeffrey R. Long to study magnetic exchange between actinides and transition metals. During this time he was awarded a Distinguished Reines Postdoctoral Fellowship at LANL and presented an opportunity to work in a completely different field, using synchrotron-generated radiation to probe electronic structure. Currently his interests lie in research that involves energy and the environment through fields loosely defined by synthesis, electronic structure, and synchrotron spectroscopy.
Rodrigo Noriega
Stanford University, Applied Physics, Stanford, CA 94305
Rodrigo Noriega earned his BS in Engineering Physics from Tecnologico de Monterrey in Mexico (2006). He is currently a fifth year graduate student in the Applied Physics program at Stanford University working under the direction of Prof. Alberto Salleo. His research focuses on the characterization of dopants and defect states in zinc oxide nanostructures, as well as on the measurement and modeling of disorder in organic semiconductors.
Juana Rudati
Xradia, Concord, CA 94520
Dr. Rudati is R&D Project Manager at Xradia where she concentrates on advancing the capabilities of high-resolution x-ray microscopes (30nm and beyond). She has also developed and used XRF/XRD instruments. As a postdoc, Dr. Rudati was stationed at SLAC. She frequents both SSRL and APS to perform experiments with and test improvements on x-ray microscopes. She joined this company in 2006.
Alberto Salleo
Stanford University, Materials Science and Engineering, Stanford, CA 94305
After obtaining a PhD in Materials Science from UC Berkeley in 2001, Alberto Salleo joined Xerox PARC as a post-doctoral fellow and was appointed Assistant Professor in Materials Science at Stanford University in 2005. He is the recipient of a Fulbright fellowship, two Xerox Performance Awards, the NSF Career Award, the 3M Untenured Faculty Award and the SPIE Early Career Award. His main area of research is the investigation of structure-property relationships in organic semiconductors with emphasis on the role of defects. In collaboration with M. Toney at SSRL his group has developed synchrotron-based x-ray diffraction techniques to measure quantitatively paracrystalline disorder and degree of texture and crystallinity in semiconducting polymers. These microstructure parameters are used to understand how disorder at different length-scales affects charge transport. His group has also used anomalous X-ray diffraction to study Al and GA doping of ZnO nanostructures.
Edward Snell
Hauptman Woodward Institute, Buffalo, NY
Eddie's background is X-ray crystallography, and bio spectroscopy and SAXS are complementary techniques that are invaluable to furthering the structural and mechanistic information on the biological world.
Jessica Vey
California State University Northridge, Pharmacology, Northridge, CA 91330
Jessica Vey is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at CSUN. She was trained as a protein crystallographer as a graduate student in Dr. Catherine Drennan¹s laboratory at MIT and as a postdoctoral researcher in Dr. Tina Iverson¹s laboratory at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. She has been an SSRL user since 2002, and is now using protein crystallography, biochemistry and bioinformatics to characterize selected flavin-containing monooxygenases, with the long-term goal of rationally engineering enzymes to alter their substrate specificity.
Beth Wurzburg (Ex Officio NUFO)
Stanford University, Structural Biology, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
Beth Wurzburg is a Research Associate in the laboratory of Prof. Ted Jardetzky. She trained as a protein biochemist (Don Wiley's laboratory) and as a crystallographer (Ted Jardetzky's laboratory), and she has been collecting data at synchrotrons since 1995. Her research interests include biophysical studies of proteins of the immune system and of human pathogens.

 

Find Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource on TwitterFind Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource on YouTubeFind Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource on Flickr