American chemist
Dawn Angela Shaughnessy is an American radiochemist and principal investigator of the heavy element group at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory .[ 3] She was involved in the discovery of five superheavy elements with atomic numbers 114 to 118.[ 2]
Early life and education
Shaughnessy wanted to be a doctor as a child but became interested in science at middle school [ 4] and studied at El Segundo High School .[ 5] She earned her bachelor's in chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley , in 1993.[ 6] She joined Darleane C. Hoffman 's group for her doctoral studies, and completed her PhD [ 1] at the UC Berkeley College of Chemistry in 2000.[ 7] [ 8] Her thesis investigated the delayed fission of einsteinium .[ 1] [ 6] She won an award recognising her strength in graduate instruction.[ 6]
Research
Shaughnessy joined the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in 2000, working under Heino Nitsche.[ 6] As part of a United States Department of Energy effort to clean up nuclear materials in the environment, Shaughnessy studied how plutonium interacts with manganese -bearing minerals.[ 6] She joined the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in 2002.[ 4]
In 2012 her group received a $5,000 grant which they donated to the Livermore High School department of chemistry.[ 7] She was appointed group leader of the experimental nuclear and radiochemistry group in 2013.[ 9] She has been involved in campaigns to celebrate Women's History Month .[ 10] In 2014 she was an editor of the book The Chemistry of Superheavy Elements.[ 2]
While leading the heavy element group, Shaughnessy partnered with the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research ; the team managed to identify five new superheavy elements .[ 11] [ 12] [ 13] [ 4] The elements were confirmed by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) in January 2016.[ 14] [ 15] As they were discovered at the Livermore lab, she named element 116 Livermorium .[ 16] Her recent work has included nuclear forensics – being able to identify the traces of fissile material, products, and activation products after an explosion.[ 17] [ 18] Her team are trying to automate sample preparation and detection, allowing them to speed up their isotope analysis .[ 18]
Awards and honors
Shaughnessy has won numerous awards and honors including:
References
^ a b c Shaughnessy, Dawn Angela (2000). Electron-capture delayed fission properties of neutron-deficient einsteinium nuclei . berkeley.edu (PhD thesis). University of California, Berkeley. OCLC 892827700 .
^ a b c Schädel, Matthias; Shaughnessy, Dawn, eds. (2016). The Chemistry of Superheavy Elements (2nd ed.). Springer. doi :10.1007/978-3-642-37466-1 . ISBN 9783662500170 . S2CID 122675117 .
^ Dawn Shaughnessy publications indexed by the Scopus bibliographic database. (subscription required)
^ a b c "Dawn Shaughnessy, Most Creative People 2016" . Fast Company . Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ "Hall of Fame" . elsegundohigh.org . Archived from the original on 2018-07-27. Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ a b c d e "Superheavy Element Discovery and Chemistry at LLNL" . Berkeley Nuclear Engineering . Archived from the original on 2018-07-27. Retrieved 2024-04-08 .
^ a b "Meet the Woman Who Just Changed the Periodic Table As You Know It" . Verily . Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ "Dawn Shaughnessy" . pls.llnl.gov . Retrieved 2024-04-08 .
^ "Women @ Energy: Dawn Shaughnessy" . energy.gov . Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (2013-03-21), Meet Livermore Chemist Dawn Shaughnessy , retrieved 2018-07-26
^ Bing, Jeb. "Livermore Lab team discovers six new elements" . Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ Netburn, Deborah (2016-01-05). "It's official: Four super-heavy elements to be added to the periodic table" . Los Angeles Times . Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ "Lab scientists discover five new nuclei" . Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ Monks, Kieron. "Nuclear detective tracking the last elements" . CNN . Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ "Livermore Lab's discovery expands chemistry's periodic table" . East Bay Times . 2016-01-04. Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (2016-03-17), Behold Livermorium: A Quest for New Elements , retrieved 2018-07-26
^ "Providing data for nuclear detectives" . Research & Development . 2015-03-03. Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ a b c "Providing data for nuclear detectives" . Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory . 2015-03-03. Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ "DOE recognizes Lab's outstanding mentors" . Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory . 2010-07-02. Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ "LLNL team donates heavily to Livermore High" . Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory . 2011-05-18. Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ "2012 - Inductees - Women's Hall Of Fame - Alameda County" . acgov.org . Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ "Shaughnessy inducted to Alameda County Women's Hall Of Fame" . Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory . 2012-03-28. Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
^ "Researcher cracks top 10 in 'most creative' list" . Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory . 2016-05-17. Retrieved 2018-07-26 .
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