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Yuji Arai
Clemson University, Department of Entomology, Soils and
Plant Science, Clemson, S. Carolina, 29634-0315 |
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Assistant Professor of Environmental Soil Chemistry at
Clemson University in Clemson, SC. Since 1997, he has been conducting molecular
environmental soil chemistry research using bulk- and microfocused(µ)-XAS,
µ-XRF and µ-XRD techniques at ALS, APS, NSLS, and SSRL. His major research
interest is to understand the molecular scale chemical reactions of nutrients,
metal(loid)s, and radionuclides at the soil mineral-water interface that is
responsible for the field-scale transport processes. He is interested in
developing an interdisciplinary molecular environmental soil chemical research
program through academia. He would like to represent the voice of users to
further improve the BL capabilities and the accommodation of SSRL user
facilities. |
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email: yarai@clemson.edu |
ph: 864-656-2607
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Ben Gilbert
LBNL, Earth Sciences Division, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
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Benjamin Gilbert is a scientist in Lawrence Berkeley National Lab's Earth Science Division with a research program studying the materials properties and reactivity of naturally occurring nanoparticles. Following pH work at the UW-Madison SRC on soft x-ray spectromicroscopy, his experimental program includes high energy x-ray scattering at the APS, soft x-ray emission and absorption spectroscopy at the ALS, and small-angle x-ray scattering and EXAFS spectroscopy at the SSRL. He is excited by the development of fast x-ray techniques to study chemical processes with time resolution. |
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email: bgilbert@lbl.gov |
ph:
510-495-2748
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Leslie Jimison
Stanford University, Department of Materials Science &
Engineering, 476 Lomita Mall, Stanford, CA 94305 |
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Leslie Jimison is a fifth year Ph.D. student working for Alberto Salleo in the
Materials Science and Engineering Department at Stanford University. Leslie is
a regular user at SSRL. She uses X-ray diffraction at beam lines 11-3, 7-2 and
2-1 to investigate the microstructure of organic semiconducting thin films. She
uses the diffraction data to correlate microstructural details with electronic
performance of organic thin film transistors. She is originally from North
Carolina, where she graduated with a B.S. in Materials Science at NC State
University.
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email: ljimison@stanford.edu
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ph:
919-815-4851 |
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Katherine A.
Kantardjieff (Chair)
CSU Pomona/Keck Center for Molecular Structure |
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Professor and Chair, Department of Chemistry, Cal Poly Pomona (on
leave from CSU Fullerton until May 2011). Director of the W.M. Keck Foundation Center for
Molecular Structure. She completed Ph.D and postdoctoral work in physical
chemistry and structural biology at UCLA with David Eisenberg. Kantardjieff's
laboratory is the only member of the Tuberculosis Structural Genomics
Consortium from a non-PhD granting institution. CMolS is comprised of
comprehensive X-ray diffraction and computational laboratories supporting
research and education as a core facility in the 23-campus CSU, as well as the
STaRBURSTT-CyberDiffraction Consortium, a nationwide virtual organization of
predominantly undergraduate institutions. CMolS pioneered the use of remote
instrumentation access at PUIs and, since 2006, CMolS is a research partner
with SSRL. Kantardjieff's own research investigates protein structure and
function, employing combined experimental and in silico approaches of
crystallography, biophysical methods, computation and informatics. The
knowledge gained is applied to the engineering of molecules with specific
properties, and to structure-guided drug design. Systems of current interest
include bacterial cytochromes c', carbonyl reductases, cholinesterases and
several tuberculosis proteins. Kantardjieff and collaborators at Fullerton have
established a research computing cluster for computational biochemistry and
crystallography, which is part of a larger CSU system-wide, distributed
computing resource. Kantardjieff has developed and deployed crystallography and
computational courses and workshops, including some delivered entirely online,
at both the undergraduate and post-graduate levels. She has led national and
international efforts in crystallography education and training. Kantardjieff's
activities led to her election to the United States National Committee for
Crystallography, of which she is currently Vice Chair. |
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email: kkantardjieff@csupomona.edu |
ph: 909-869-3651
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R. Joseph Kline
NIST, 100 Bureau Dr., Gaitherburg, MD 20899 |
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R. Joseph Kline is a staff scientist in the Polymers Division at NIST. He uses
x-ray diffraction to study the morphology and crystallography of semiconducting
polymers for organic electronics and photovoltaics. He has been a frequent user
at SSRL since 2004 when he was a graduate student at Stanford working for Prof.
Michael McGehee. Joe received SSRL's Spicer Young Investigator Award in 2008.
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email: joe.kline@nist.gov |
ph: 301-975-4356 |
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Cathy Knotts (SSRL Liaison)
SSRL, User Research Administration,
2575 Sand Hill Rd., Menlo Park, CA 94025 |
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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 North
ern California in 1994. Cathy received a B.S. from the University of Maryland
majoring in Health Science and Policy. |
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email: knotts@slac.stanford.edu |
ph:
650-926-3191
fax: 926-926-3600 |
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Aaron Lindenberg
Stanford University, SLAC Photon Science MS: 59, 2575 Sand Hill Rd.,
Menlo Park, CA 94025 |
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Aaron Lindenberg is Assistant Professor in the Materials Science and
Engineering Department at Stanford University, joint with Photon Science at
SLAC since 2007. Member of the PULSE Institute for Ultrafast Energy Science.
Staff scientist at SLAC from 2003-2007. B.A. and Ph.D. in physics from Columbia
University and University of California Berkeley, respectively. Research focus
is generally on the ultrafast properties of materials.
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email: aaronl@stanford.edu |
ph: 650-926-4558
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Wayne Lukens
(Ex-Officio)
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Chemical
Sciences, 1 Cyclotron Rd., Berkeley, CA 94720 |
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Staff scientist in the Actinide Chemistry Group at Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory. His research focuses mainly on the behavior of technetium in
nuclear waste and nuclear wasteforms. In addition, his research examines
electronic structure and bonding in actinide complexes. He has carried out
EXAFS experiments at SSRL since 1992. Currently, he is using EXAFS and XANES
to characterize the speciation of technetium in different nuclear wasteforms. |
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email: wwlukens@lbl.gov |
ph: 510-486-4305
fax: 510-486-5596 |
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Matthew Sazinsky
Pomona College, Chemistry, 645 N. College Ave., Claremont, CA
91711 |
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Matthew Sazinsky is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Chemistry at
Pomona College in Claremont CA. He has been a user at SSRL since 1999 and was
trained as a protein crystallographer in Dr. Stephen Lippard's laboratory at
MIT and Dr. Amy Rosenzweig's laboratory at Northwestern University. His
research focuses on the structural and functional characterization of membrane
proteins and metalloenzymes.
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email: matthew.sazinsky@pomona.edu |
ph: 909-607-1011 |
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David Singer
UC Berkeley, Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences |
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David Singer is a post-doctoral scholar in the Berkeley Nanogeoscience Group,
working with Jill Banfield (UC Berkeley) and Glenn Waychunas (Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory). He conducted his graduated work with Gordon Brown at
Stanford University in the Geological and Environmental Sciences Department.
His main research interest is the fate and transport of heavy metals and
radionuclides in the environment. He is currently working on determining the
mechanisms of uranium sequestration by magnetite. He aims to elucidate the
factors which control sorption, nucleation and (co)precipitation, using
synchrotron-based X-ray spectroscopy and scattering techniques combined with
microscopy and batch-flow sorption experiments. He has been an active user at
SSRL, APS, ALS and NSLS, and looks forward to representing the interests of the
Environmental and Geoscience community.
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email:
davidmarcsinger@gmail.com
website:
http://nanogeoscience.berkeley.edu/People/DSinger/DSinger.html
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ph: 510-495-2359
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Robert Szilagyi (Past Chair)
Montana State University, Chemistry and Biochemistry,
223 Gaines Hall, Bozeman, MT 59715 |
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Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Montana State
University-Bozeman. His research interest focuses on bioinorganic,
organometallic, and computational application of synchrotron radiation. He has
five years of experience in XAS at various beamlines of SSRL and ALS. He uses
NEXAS and EXAFS techniques in close correlation with theoretical calculations
to investigate the relationships between chemical reactivity and electronic and
geometric structures of bioinorganic active sites and biomimetic compounds,
such as iron-sulfur clusters, S-nitrosated thiolates, as well as, tungsten,
molybdenum, and palladium containing homogeneous catalysts. His motivation to
be part of the SSRLUOEC is to provide a representation for junior faculty, to
increase graduate and undergraduate student training, and to develop a spectral
database for the community of synchrotron radiation users. |
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email: szilagyi@montana.edu |
ph: 406-994-4263
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Beth Wurzburg
Stanford University, Structural Biology, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
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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.
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email: wurzburg@stanford.edu
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ph:
650-723-4576
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Junko Yano
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Physical Biosciences, 1
Cyclotron Rd, MS: 66-3, Berkeley, CA 94720
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Junko Yano, Ph.D. is a Scientist in the Physical Biosciences Division at
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. She has been using X-ray
absorption/emission spectroscopy to study the structure of the catalytic Mn4Ca
cluster and the mechanism of photosynthetic water oxidation. She is a frequent
user of the spectroscopy beam lines at SSRL for last 8 years. Her current
interests are in the application of polarized X-ray absorption spectroscopy to
protein single crystals. She was also involved in XRD studies using the
diffraction beam lines at the PF, and she has used beam lines at the ALS, APS,
SPing8 and ESRF. She would like to reflect users' voice to the improvement of
SSRL beamlines.
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email: jyano@lbl.gov
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ph:
510-486-4366
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