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UA Doctoral Student to Meet With Nobel Laureates
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. Imagine spending a week in Europe interacting
with the world's top minds in your field of study.
That's the kind of scientist's "dream vacation," University
of Alabama doctoral student Ann Visser will experience in June when
she travels to Lindau, Germany, to attend lectures and meetings
with some 66 Nobel Prize winners in the fields of chemistry, physics,
physiology and medicine.
Visser, who is working toward a Ph.D. in chemistry at UA, has been
selected as one of 36 students sponsored by the U.S. Department
of Energy to attend the 50th anniversary meeting of Nobel laureates
June 26-30.
The DOE-sponsored students will join graduate students from around
the world at the meeting where they will spend mornings listening
to lectures by the world-renowned scientists and afternoons interacting
with them in small group settings.
"I hope to meet as many of the Nobel Prize winners as possible,"
said Visser, who turned down an opportunity to present her own research
at a chemistry conference in Washington, D.C., because it conflicted
with the dates of the Nobel meeting.
The students sponsored by the DOE represent 36 different universities
and research facilities including such prestigious institutions
as Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory, Princeton, Tulane, the University of California-Berkeley
and the University of Chicago. The DOE restricted institutions nationwide
to one nominee each in the competitive program. All the students
are in their second or third year of graduate work and are currently
part of scientific teams doing research with funding from the DOE.
Visser's research, conducted through UA's Center for Green Manufacturing,
focuses on the development of room temperature ionic liquids as
alternatives to organic solvents. These liquids may some day serve
as environmentally friendly solvents for use in a wide variety of
industrial applications. The research, under the direction of Dr.
Robin Rogers, professor of chemistry and director of the Center
for Green Manufacturing, is funded by grants through the DOE's Basic
Energy Science division.
Rogers recruited Visser to UA's doctoral program from an undergraduate
internship at Argonne National Laboratory outside Chicago. A native
of Zeeland, Mich., she is a graduate of Grand Valley State College
in Michigan.
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