Susan M. Kauzlarich

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Susan M. Kauzlarich
Born
Alma mater College of William and Mary, Michigan State University
Known for Solid-state chemistry, Materials chemistry, Nanoscience, Zintl phases, Thermoelectric materials
AwardsFellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Fellow of the American Chemical Society, Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics, and Engineering Mentoring, IUPAC Distinguished Women in Chemistry/Chemical Engineering
Scientific career
FieldsChemistry
Institutions University of California, Davis
Academic advisors Bruce A. Averill, John D. Corbett
Doctoral students Julia Chan, Stephanie Brock

Susan M. Kauzlarich is an American chemist and is presently a distinguished professor of chemistry at the University of California, Davis (UC Davis). [1] At UC Davis, Kauzlarich leads a research group focused on the synthesis and characterization of Zintl phases and nanoclusters with applications in the fields of thermoelectric materials, [2] [3] [4] magnetic resonance imaging, energy storage, [5] opto-electronics, and drug delivery. Kauzlarich has published over 250 peer-reviewed publications and has been awarded several patents. [6] In 2009, Kauzlarich received the annual Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring, which is administered by the National Science Foundation to acknowledge faculty members who raise the membership of minorities, women and disabled students in the science and engineering fields. [7] In January 2022 she became Deputy Editor for the scientific journal, Science Advances. She gave the Edward Herbert Boomer Memorial Lecture of the University of Alberta in 2023. [8]

Contents

Education, career, and service

Kauzlarich received a Bachelor of Science in chemistry from the College of William & Mary in 1980. [1] [9] Although originally planning to become a high school chemistry teacher, her collegiate mentors encouraged her to pursue graduate studies in chemistry. [10] She did her graduate studies with Bruce A. Averill at Michigan State University, receiving a chemistry PhD in 1985. During her graduate studies, Kauzlarich primarily worked on the synthesis, development and study of low-dimensional conducting materials derived from the layered material FeOCl. [11] [12] Her characterization methods of these new materials included x-ray absorption spectroscopy and neutron diffraction. From 1985 to 1987, Kauzlarich was a postdoctoral fellow with John Corbett at Iowa State University [13] where she explored the synthesis and bonding characteristics of novel extended condensed metal chain compounds built on [R66I12Z] (R=Ln, Y, Sc; Z=B,C,N, C2) clusters. [14]

Kauzlarich joined the department of Chemistry at the University of California, Davis in 1987. She was promoted to associate professor in 1992, promoted to full professor in 1996, and in 2014, distinguished professor. She was the Maria Goeppert Mayer Distinguished Scholar at Argonne National Laboratory from 1997 to 1998, Faculty Assistant to the Dean of Mathematical and Physical Sciences from 2010 to 2013, and chair of the chemistry department from 2013 to 2016. [1]

Kauzlarich served as an associate editor for the journal Chemistry of Materials from 2006 to 2021 and is a deputy editor for Science Advances (2022-). She has been a member of the editorial advisory board for the handbook Physics and Chemistry of the Rare Earths since 2002. She was an associate editor for the Journal of Solid State Chemistry from 2000 to 2005, [1] and as a member of the advisory review board of the Research Corporation for Science Advancement from 2004 to 2010. [1] [10] Kauzlarich is the editor of the book Chemistry, structure, and bonding of Zintl phases and ions. [15] [16]

Kauzlarich is an advocate for diversity in the chemistry community and is well known for her personal commitment to mentorship. Throughout her career she has built and continues to support a pipeline of women and underrepresented students in the field of chemistry from high school through graduate study. During her career, Kauzlarich's mentorship strategies have expanded to help support a culture shift in her community through discussions, workshops, and development of new initiatives. [7] [17] One of her initiatives has been the development of the American Chemical Society Summer Educational Experience for the Economically Disadvantaged Program (SEED) program which she established at UC Davis in 1988. [18] For her mentorship of students, Kauzlarich was recognized by Barack Obama with the 2009 Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics, and Engineering Mentoring. [7] [19] At UC Davis, she serves as committee member for the Center for the Advancement of Multicultural Perspectives on Science, part of the UC Davis "ADVANCE" initiative. [20] She is also an active member of the steering committees at UC Davis including the Women's Research and Resource Center and Women in Science and Engineering. [21]

Research and notable publications

Kauzlarich's research focuses on synthesis and characterization of novel solid state materials. Some of Kauzlarich's publications from her independent research career are listed below:

Kauzlarich has also been a longstanding global expert on the preparation of colloidal nanoclusters and most particularly the preparation of challenging to access Group IV derivatives. These materials hold promise in the areas of biomedicine alongside, importantly, next-generation devices with novel optical and transport properties. Listed below are some of her research team's publications in this research area to-date:

Awards

Kauzlarich has received numerous awards including: [1]

Related Research Articles

Oleylamine is an organic compound with a molecular formula C18H35NH2. It is an unsaturated fatty amine related to the fatty acid oleic acid. The pure compound is a clear and colorless liquid. Commercially available oleylamine reagents vary in color from clear and colorless to varying degrees of yellow due to impurities. The major impurities include trans isomer (elaidylamine) and other long chain amines with varying chain lengths. Minor impurities include oxygen-containing substances such as amides and nitroalkanes.

John Dudley Corbett was an American chemist who specialized in inorganic solid-state chemistry. At Iowa State and Ames Lab, Corbett lead a research group that focused on the synthesis and characterization of two broad classes of materials, notably Zintl phases and condensed transition metal halide clusters. Both classes of materials are important for their uses, for instance thermoelectrics, and for the theoretical advances they made possible by working to understand their complex bonding and electronic properties.

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A two-dimensional semiconductor is a type of natural semiconductor with thicknesses on the atomic scale. Geim and Novoselov et al. initiated the field in 2004 when they reported a new semiconducting material graphene, a flat monolayer of carbon atoms arranged in a 2D honeycomb lattice. A 2D monolayer semiconductor is significant because it exhibits stronger piezoelectric coupling than traditionally employed bulk forms. This coupling could enable applications. One research focus is on designing nanoelectronic components by the use of graphene as electrical conductor, hexagonal boron nitride as electrical insulator, and a transition metal dichalcogenide as semiconductor.

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Mas Subramanian,, is a solid-state materials scientist at Oregon State University in Corvallis, Oregon. He is a University Distinguished Professor and the Milton Harris Chair of Materials Science in the university's Department of Chemistry. His work in solid-state chemistry on structure-property relationships of inorganic compounds has led to several breakthrough discoveries of novel functional materials, many of which have found usage in various applications. Subramanian has authored 400 research publications and holds 60 patents. His publications have received more than 30,000 citations.

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Oxyarsenides or arsenide oxides are chemical compounds formally containing the group AsO, with one arsenic and one oxygen atom. The arsenic and oxygen are not bound together as in arsenates or arsenites, instead they make a separate presence bound to the cations (metals), and could be considered as a mixed arsenide-oxide compound. So a compound with OmAsn requires cations to balance a negative charge of 2m+3n. The cations will have charges of +2 or +3. The trications are often rare earth elements or actinides. They are in the category of oxypnictide compounds.

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References

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  2. Brown, Shawna R.; Kauzlarich, Susan M.; Gascoin, Franck; Snyder, G. Jeffrey (April 1, 2006). "Yb14MnSb11: New High Efficiency Thermoelectric Material for Power Generation". Chemistry of Materials. 18 (7): 1873–1877. doi:10.1021/cm060261t. ISSN   0897-4756.
  3. Grebenkemper, Jason H.; Hu, Yufei; Barrett, Dashiel; Gogna, Pawan; Huang, Chen-Kuo; Bux, Sabah K.; Kauzlarich, Susan M. (August 25, 2015). "High Temperature Thermoelectric Properties of Yb14MnSb11 Prepared from Reaction of MnSb with the Elements". Chemistry of Materials. 27 (16): 5791–5798. doi: 10.1021/acs.chemmater.5b02446 . ISSN   0897-4756.
  4. Sui, Fan; Kauzlarich, Susan M. (May 10, 2016). "Tuning Thermoelectric Properties of Type I Clathrate K 8– x Ba x Al 8+ x Si 38– x through Barium Substitution". Chemistry of Materials. 28 (9): 3099–3107. doi: 10.1021/acs.chemmater.6b00566 . ISSN   0897-4756.
  5. Pettigrew, Katherine; Liu, Q.; Power, Phillip; Kauzlarich, Susan (2003). "Solution Synthesis of Alkyl- and Alkyl/Alkoxy-Capped Silicon Nanoparticles via Oxidation of Mg2Si". Chemistry of Materials. 15 (21): 4005. doi:10.1021/cm034403k.
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  12. Averill, Bruce; Kauzlarich, Susan M.; Teo, B.K.; Faber, J. (1985). "Structural and Physical Studies on a New Class of Low-Dimensional Conducting Material: FeOC1 Intercalated With TTF and Related Molecules". Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals. 120: 259–262. doi:10.1080/00268948508075798.
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  15. Chemistry, structure, and bonding of Zintl phases and ions. Kauzlarich, Susan Mary. New York: VCH. 1996. ISBN   1560819006. OCLC   34243294.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  16. Eichhorn, Bryan (May 1999). "Chemistry, Structure, and Bonding of Zintl Phases and Ions Edited by Susan M. Kauzlarich. VCH: New York. 1996. v + 306 pp. ISBN 1-56081-900-6". Journal of the American Chemical Society . 121 (22): 5352. doi:10.1021/ja985653i.
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