CALL FOR NOMINATIONS FOR

THE 2014 OSU WOMEN’S CENTER WOMEN OF ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS

The OSU Women’s Center is pleased to issue this call for nominations for the 2014 OSU Women Center’s Women of Achievement Awards.  These awards honor the commitment to and contributions of women whose work has touched the lives of students, and colleagues. You are especially encouraged to consider nominating those who have shown themselves to be dedicated to improving the lives of other women, but whose work may sometimes go unnoticed, unrecognized, or unrewarded.

Please help us identify women in your colleges, departments, classrooms, organizations and committees by distributing this form to anyone interested in making a nomination.  With the exception of those who have received the award in the past, all are eligible.

For a list of past WOA recipients, click here

We invite you to not only consider nominating a worthy individual but hope that you will plan to attend this year’s award ceremony in the Memorial Union Lounge on May 19, 2014!

Nomination Criteria

1.     The nominee may not have received the award in the past.

2.     The nominee must be a member of the OSU community or a community partner.

3.     Nominees should:

a.      have a demonstrated commitment to equality, and dedication to furthering the lives of women, especially those of OSU students.

b.     be engaged in work that has positively affected the lives of women.

c.      have served as a role model in the lives of girls and/or women.

4.     The nominee must not be a current member of the OSU Women’s Center Advisory Board.

click here for a list of the 2013-2014 Advisory Board members

Nomination packets containing the following information will be considered:

1.     Primary nominator’s letter containing:

a.      Name, address, phone, and email of nominator

b.     Relationship to nominee

c.      Curriculum vita or resume with contact information of the woman being nominated

d.     A nomination letter with specific examples of the nominee’s actions and accomplishments:

i.     demonstrated commitment to equality, and dedication to furthering the lives of women, especially those of OSU students.

ii.     engagement in work that has positively affected the lives of women.

iii.     served as a role model in the lives of OSU girls and/or women.

2.     Additional letters of support:

a.      One but no more than two additional letters beyond that of the primary nominator:

i.     Each letter should clearly address, with specific examples, the criteria and qualifications about which the letter writer has direct knowledge (see 1.d above).

ii.     Each letter must not exceed 2 pages (single space-#12 font-1” margins)

b.     Primary nominator should

i.     forward a copy of the award criteria to letter writers

ii.     remind letter writers that strong nominations will exemplify the nominee’s accomplishments in accordance with award criteria.

Please email nomination packets IN FULL to womenscenter@oregonstate.edu (Attention WOAC). It is the responsibility of the primary nominator to make sure that the packet is complete. Incomplete packets will not be considered. Deadline to receive application packets is 9 am on April 7th, 2014. 

All questions may be emailed to womenscenter@oregonstate.edu (Attention WOAC)

14 March 2014

To the OSU Community:

President Ray and I are pleased to share with you that OSU Alumni, Dr. Ann A. Kiessling will be our 2014 Commencement Speaker and Honorary Doctorate recipient.

Dr. Kiessling is the director of the Bedford Stem Cell Research Foundation and a leader in both stem cell research and reproductive biology.  After receiving her Ph.D. at OSU in Biochemistry and Biophysics, Dr. Kiessling held a faculty appointment at OHSU and then joined the faculty of Harvard University in 1985.  There she specialized in obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive biology, and worked with the Department of Surgery.

Dr. Kiessling is noted for her discovery of reverse transcriptase activity in normal human cells.   This discovery spearheaded the importance of naturally occurring retrovirus sequences in human genes, now thought to be important to the genetic plasticity involved in human evolution and biology.  In the early 1990’s she pioneered reproductive options for couples with the HIV diseases and Hepatitis C.  The techniques she developed led to successful births of 121 children free of those diseases.

Dr. Kiessling’s book, “Human Embryonic Stem Cells: An Introduction to the Science and Therapeutic Potential”, published in 2003 and released in 2006, is the first textbook on the topic.  In addition, she’s published more than 100 scientific papers and has given more than 60 lectures to audiences around the world.

We are honored that Dr. Kiessling will give our commencement address during the 2014 OSU graduation ceremony.

Sincerely,

Sabah Randhawa, Provost and Executive Vice President(reprinted from University Wide email) 

We are asking your assistance in forwarding this message to inform students and faculty in your department of these outstanding fellowship opportunities.  More detailed information and an online application can be found at www.nationalacademies.org/rap.

The National Research Council of the National Academies sponsors a number of awards for graduate, postdoctoral and senior researchers at participating federal laboratories and affiliated institutions. These awards include generous stipends ranging from $45,000 – $80,000 per year for recent Ph.D. recipients, and higher for additional experience.  Graduate entry level stipends begin at $30,000.  These awards provide the opportunity for recipients to do independent research in some of the best-equipped and staffed laboratories in the U.S.  Research opportunities are open to U.S. citizens, permanent residents, and for some of the laboratories, foreign nationals.

Detailed program information, including online applications, instructions on how to apply, and a list of participating laboratories, are available on the NRC Research Associateship Programs Web site (see link above).

Questions should be directed to the NRC at 202-334-2760 (phone) or rap@nas.edu.

There are four annual review cycles.

Review Cycle:  May; Opens March 1; Closes May 1

Review Cycle:  August; Opens June 1; Closes August 1

Review Cycle:  November; Opens September 1; Closes November 1

Review Cycle:  February; Opens December 1; Closes February 1

Applicants should contact prospective Adviser(s) at the lab(s) prior to the application deadline to discuss their research interests and funding opportunities.

“Reprinted with permission from the February 2014 issue of TLT, the official monthly magazine of the Society of Tribologists and Lubrication Engineers, a not-for-profit professional society headquartered in Park Ridge, Ill., www.stle.org.”

Aluminum is continuing to be an important metal used in the manufacture of automobiles. Its  lighter weight (as compared to steel alloys), good strength and ability to elongate are important factors that enable automobiles to be produced with higher levels of fuel economy.

But aluminum does not have the mechanical strength of steel. In a previous TLT article, a new process  known as high-pressure torsion was discussed that increases the strength of aluminum to a level  comparable to carbon steel without sacrificing ductility. A well-known alloy, 7075 aluminum, was solution treated at 480 C for five hours followed by quenching in room temperature water. The resulting metal was found to display a strength of 1.0 GPa in a tensile strength test, which is comparable to a typical hardened and tempered carbon-steel alloy.

Key ConceptsAluminum is fabricated into components used in automobiles through a series of metalworking operations that occur mainly with water-based fluids. There are a number of challenges in finding optimum machining conditions for specific aluminum alloys.

But one of the intriguing issues is what happens to the aluminum alloy when it comes into contact with water, which is the primary component in a water-based  metalworking fluid. Aluminum can readily form a series of metal salts with other additives used in MWFs such as fatty acids. These salts can become water insoluble and form residues that are similar to greases.  Such contaminants are undesirable because they can degrade the performance of the MWF.

Chong Fang, assistant professor of chemistry at Oregon State University in Corvallis, Ore., says, “Addition of aluminum to water leads to the formation of a variety of complex species that include monomeric, oligomeric and polymeric hydroxides. These species are present in water as colloidal solutions and gels, but they can also form precipitates and crystals.”

Gaining a better understanding of the composition of these species is extremely difficult. Fang says, “Many of these species cannot be readily identified because they are difficult to detect using techniques such as  27Al nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and conventional Raman spectroscopy. The problem is water  binds in many different positions with respect to aluminum, leading to the formation of different types of highly coordinated structures, and there may be transient species involved. The elucidation of aqueous aluminum speciation pathways demands a technique capable of monitoring molecular choreography.”

Some of these aluminum water species are known as hydroxide clusters that contain multiple aluminum atoms. Fang says, “Formation of aluminum clusters is dependent on factors such as reagent concentration and the method and rate of solution pH change.”

If specific aluminum clusters can be selectively synthesized, then these clusters can be studied to gain an  understanding of their respective properties and how they may form when water contacts aluminum metal. One specific “flat” aluminum cluster has now been synthesized through a pHcontrolled process monitored by a novel analytical technique.

FEMTOSECOND RAMAN SPECTROSCOPY
Figure 3Fang and his fellow researchers synthesized an aqueous aluminum nanocluster known as Al13 by slowly raising the pH of a solution and following the reaction using an emerging technique known as Femtosecond Stimulated Raman Spectroscopy (FSRS). He says, “We chose to produce Al13 because this species  represents a naturally occurring mineral that is octahedral in configuration. We have also pioneered a novel technique that enables thin metal-oxide films that are a few atomic layers thick to be prepared directly from solution instead of using more expensive methods. This integrated platform will enable Al13 potentially to be used as a green solution in broad applications such as transistors, solar energy cells, catalytic converters and corrosion inhibitors.”

The researchers used an electrochemical process to slowly and precisely raise the pH of the reaction  mixture to produce Al13. Fang says, “In Stage I, we started at a pH of 2.2 where the dominant aluminum species prepared from a 1 molar aluminum nitrate solution is the monomeric aluminum hexa-aqua ion.”

The solution is placed in a two-compartment electrochemical cell, which contains an anode compartment and a cathode compartment. Nitrate ions migrate into the anode compartment where oxygen is produced.

Aluminum ions migrate into the cathode compartment where hydrogen is produced. The charge balance is maintained. An electric current is used to control the process, which exhibits a net reduction in proton  (hydrogen ions) concentration in the cathode compartment as the pH is slowly increased, wherein  condensation of aluminum species occurs to produce larger aluminum nanoclusters.

FSRS was used to follow the reaction because of the limitation of conventional Raman spectroscopy. Fang says, “We needed to detect small changes in Raman vibrational modes down to between 300 and 500 cm-1. Unfortunately, this frequency is too close to the fundamental pulse. Instead, we used non-resonant (800 nanometer) FSRS spectroscopy with a newly developed Raman probe pulse based on our photonic  advances to cover that spectral range.”

FSRS reveals that the reaction moves to stage II at a pH between 2.4 and 2.7 due to the formation of an  intermediate identified as Al7. Fang says, “As the pH increases to between 2.7 and 3.2, further  deprotonation strips positive charges at the outer shell of Al7, leading to the formation of the larger Al13 cluster, which represents Stage III of the process. The key is to catch a glimpse of aluminum speciation as the chemistry proceeds in water.”

Figure 3 shows the two-compartment electrochemical cell and the reaction process as it moves from  monomeric aluminum in Stage I to Al13 Stage III via an octahedrally coordinated Al7 intermediate in Stage II.

The researchers deliberately ran this reaction sequence at a low pH because the involving aluminum clusters could be identified using FSRS aided by computations, and they represent the onset of larger  aluminum cluster formation. Fang says, “Work is underway to characterize the different types of clusters and species that form in aqueous solution at pH values above 7. This effort might also bring us closer to the regime where dehydration and annealing yield metal oxide thin films with versatility.”

This work is also of interest to formulators of MWFs because they are designed to operate at a pH of 9. Potentially, the aluminum clusters identified at this alkaline pH may help formulators better understand how to prepare products that will minimize such concerns as staining.

Additional information can be found in a recent article2 or by contacting Dr. Fang at chong.fang@oregonstate.edu.

REFERENCES
1. Canter, N. (2011), “Super-Strong, Ductile Aluminum,” TLT, 67 (1), pp. 10-11.
2. Wang, W., Liu, W., Chang, I., Wills, L., Zakharov, L., Boettcher, S., Cheong, P., Fang, C. and Keszler, D. (2013), “Electrolytic Synthesis of Aqueous Aluminum Nanoclusters and In Situ Characterization by  Femtosecond Raman Spectroscopy and Computations,” Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 110 (46), pp.  18397-18401.

Neil Canter heads his own consulting company, Chemical Solutions, in Willow Grove, Pa. Ideas for Tech  Beat can be submitted to him at neilcanter@comcast.net.

Dear Oregon State University Department of Chemistry,                                                            

I would like to invite you to the 2nd Annual Puget Sound Women Chemists Retreat. The Puget Sound Women Chemists Retreat is an annual networking and career-building event with the main goal of retention and advancement of women in chemistry careers.  Graduate and post-doctoral women chemists are connected to a close-knit network of colleagues and mentors and are taught strategies of career success.

This year we will be hosting this student-run regional retreat at the University of British Columbia from Friday, May 30th to Sunday, June 1st.  In an effort to include women chemists from across Canada in this unique career building opportunity, the event has been strategically scheduled to run just prior to the Canadian Chemistry Conference and Exhibition, which is being held in Vancouver.  We will be building on last year’s successful COACh negotiation workshop with new communication and career launching workshops, and we are excited to have an open discussion about how chemists can create an empowering workplace.

We sincerely hope that you will be able to attend. We invite you to visit our website at https://sites.google.com/site/pswomenchemists/ to view information about last year’s retreat and to view this year’s itinerary, speakers, and panelists.  If you have any further questions, please do not hesitate to contact us by email at pswomenchemists@gmail.com.

 

Best Regards,

Robbyn

 

Dr. Robbyn K. Anand-Perdue

Chair of the Women Chemists Committee and Secretary

American Chemical Society Puget Sound Local Section

anandrobbyn@gmail.com

The Office of Undergraduate Research seeks to recognize students and their faculty mentors for significant contributions to undergraduate research with two awards – Undergraduate Research Faculty Mentor of the Year and  Undergraduate Researcher of the Year.  Nominations are due by April 14 and 16, respectively. Nomination forms and more information about the awards are available on the URSA Web page – http://oregonstate.edu/students/research/

Calling OSU undergraduate students!  Looking for a paid summer internship that is more than just a job? Want to gain skills to be competitive in the workforce? PROMISE is a ten-week developmental internship program for OSU undergraduate students designed to provide professional or technical paid work experience and mentoring at OSU, state, and local agencies. Come to the info and application session on March 12, 12:30-2:30 p.m. in the Native American Longhouse.

The College of Science has partnered with Achievement Rewards for College Scientists (ARCS) Portland Chapter to recruit top applicants to PhD programs in the departments of biochemistry and biophysics, chemistry, mathematics, microbiology, statistics and integrative biology. This week the chapter funded two 2014-2015 awards—each for $18,000, payable over three years.