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Appendix B: Biographical Information
Pages 165-176

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From page 165...
... Robert Oppenheimer Fellow in 1988. He became a technical staff member in the Isotope and Nuclear Chemistry Division in 1989.
From page 166...
... He is the secretary of the Division of Nuclear Chemistry and Technology of the American Chemical Society. He has spent his summers for the last two decades as a senior research scientist in the Chemical Technology Division of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, guest scientist in the Nuclear Chemistry Division of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, and as a visiting scientist at the Savannah River Ecol ogy Laboratory and the Analytical Development Section of the Savannah River Technology Center.
From page 167...
... He has participated in review panels for the Characterization, Monitoring and Sensor Technology program for DOE and for the Basic Chemical Sciences panel for the EPA. His main pedagogical interests are in developing experiments involving the use of chemical instrumentation in solving chemical and environmental analytical problems.
From page 168...
... He also works in the Heavy Element Chemistry program. Before joining BES in January 2011, Dr.
From page 169...
... Dr. Moore had direct management responsibility for Berkeley's nuclear chemistry program, as chemistry department chair, as dean, and as director of the Chemistry Division (including chemistry of the actinides)
From page 170...
... Seaborg at the University of California, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, before joining the staff at LLNL. Carol Burns is a Laboratory Fellow at Los Alamos National Laboratory, and serves as the group leader for nuclear and radiochemistry in the Chemistry Division.
From page 171...
... He has 30 years experience in nuclear power plants including chemistry, engineering, nuclear oversight, operations, regulatory assurance, licensing, and security. He is currently the Exelon Chemistry Corporate functional area manager, where he is responsible for supervising 4 experienced corporate chemists, leading the chemistry peer group, and chemistry governance and oversight functional area for 17 nuclear units at 10 stations.
From page 172...
... , and the interim vice chancellor for academic affairs at Washington State University, Tri-Cities campus. Previously, she was an assistant research ecologist at the University of Georgia's Savannah River Ecology Laboratory and senior scientist at Westinghouse Savannah River Company's Savannah River Technology Center.
From page 173...
... He joined the Chemistry Division of Argonne National Laboratory in 1980, where he resumed his primary research focus of solid-state and thermochemistry of the transuranium elements. After reaching the rank of senior chemist at Argonne, he was elected a fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science and spent 6 months as an Alexander von Humboldt senior research scientist at the University of Hannover, Germany, in 1992.
From page 174...
... He chairs the Coryell Award Committee for undergraduate research for the DNCT, and is currently a councilor for the Chemistry Division of the Council on Undergraduate Research, and is past-chair of the Leadership Group for Research Experiences for Undergraduates for the Chemistry Division of the National Science Foundation. He has served on an IAEA panel for "Enhanc ing Nuclear Science Education and Training using Accelerators" and runs the Hope College Ion Beam Analysis Laboratory.
From page 175...
... His current research interests include development of automated devices for the production of fluorine-18 labeled molecules, preparation of radiopharmaceutical probes for PET and SPECT blood flow measurement, design of imaging agents targeting cancer cell surface markers, and the application of imaging in drug development. He has on-going collaborations with several pharmaceutical companies.
From page 176...
... Department of Energy (DOE) in Washington, DC, where he served as the chief scientist on the Nuclear Materials Information Program.


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