Skip to: main navigation | content

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

Proposal Review Panel

Membership



Torgny Gustafsson (MAT2)
Rutgers University
Dept of Physics & Astronomy
Piscataway, NJ, USA

 

Amy Rosenzweig (Bio)
Northwestern University
Chemistry, Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and Cell Biology
Chicago, IL, USA


John Zachara (MEIS)
Batelle / Pacific Northwest Laboratories
Chemical Sciences Division
Richland, WA, USA

 


Victor Henrich (MAT2)
Yale University
Dept of Applied Physics
New Haven, CT, USA


Michel Koch (BIO)
Muellenhoffweg 33a
EMBL (Retired)
Hamburg, Germany

 


Franz Himpsel (MAT2)
University of Wisconsin
Dept of Physics
Madison, WI, USA


Susannah Scott (MAT1)
University of California
Chemical Engineering
10 Mesa Road
Santa Barbara, CA, USA

 


Ron Stenkamp (BIO)
University of Washington
Dept of Biological Structure
Seattle, WA, USA


Rachel Segalman (MAT1)
UC Berkeley
Dept. of Chemical Engineering
201-D Gilman Hall
Berkeley, CA, USA

 


Samuel Traina (MEIS)
University of California
School of Natural Sciences
Sierra Nevada Rsch. Inst.
PO Box 2039
Merced CA, USA


Paul Fenter (MEIS)
Argonne National Laboratory
Chemistry Division
Argonne IL, USA

 


Gerard Wong (MAT1)
UCLA
Dept. of Bioengineering
Los Angeles, CA USA


Lawrence Que, Jr. (BIO)
University of Minnesota
Department of Chemistry
Minneapolis, MN, USA

   


Sub Panels


BIO
The biology panel reviews proposals requesting beam time for imaging, X-ray spectroscopic studies, small-angle scattering experiments, and crystallography of biologically important samples.

MAT1
The materials-1 panel reviews proposals requesting beamtime for material structure (atomic or nanoscopic structures of hard or soft matter) and properties (reactivity, self assembly). For example, this includes proposals concerning complex fluids, biological and synthetic polymers, batteries, organic electronics, and catalysts.

MAT2
The materials-2 panel reviews proposals requesting beam time for experiments in solid state physics and materials science, including electronic structure of solids, surfaces and interfaces, using UV and soft x-ray sources at SSRL. Examples include angle-resolved and core-level photoelectron spectroscopies, x-ray absorption and x-ray magnetic dichroism.

MEIS
The molecular environmental and interface science panel reviews proposals requesting beam time for imaging, spectroscopy, diffraction and scattering studies of natural samples and those that are designed to be environmentally and geologically relevant. Such samples are often characterized by their high degree of spatial, chemical and structural heterogeneity across a wide range of chemical concentrations. The MEIS panel considers materials of biogeochemical origin or transformation and investigations of microbiologic soil chemistry and geochemistry.


2575 Sand Hill Road, MS: 99, Menlo Park, California, 94025, USA Tel: 650-926-4000 | Fax: 650-926-4100