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         Nuclear Chemistry:     more books (100)
  1. Nuclear Chemistry: New Research
  2. Radiochemical analysis: nuclear instrumentation, radiation techniques, nuclear chemistry radioisotope techniques. July 1966 through June 1967 by James R. DeVoe, 1967-01-01
  3. Chemistry and Analysis of Radionuclides: Laboratory Techniques and Methodology by Jukka Lehto, Xiaolin Hou, 2011-02-02
  4. Materials Science and Technology: A Comprehensive Treatment, Vol. 10A, Nuclear Materials, Pt. I
  5. Separations for the Nuclear Fuel Cycle in the 21st Century (Acs Symposium, 933)
  6. PET Chemistry: The Driving Force in Molecular Imaging (Ernst Schering Foundation Symposium Proceedings)
  7. Experiments in Nuclear Science by Sidney A. Katz, Jeff C. Bryan, 2010-08-31
  8. Quantum Chemistry and Nuclear Resonance Spectroscopy Data of Natural and Synthetic Nanotechnological Materials With ND-Metal Atoms Participations by Elmira I. Yuryea, Svyatoslav P. Gabuda, et all 2007-10-29
  9. Chemical Applications of Nuclear Probes (Topics in Current Chemistry)
  10. Heavy-Ion Dynamics and Hot Nuclei: Proceedings of the 1995 Acs Nuclear Chemistry Award Symposium: Anaheim, California, USA 2-4 April 1995 by Calif.) American Chemical Society Meeting 1995 (Anaheim, 1995-12
  11. Nuclear Chemistry (Ellis Horwood Series in Physical Chemistry) by O. Navrateil, 1993-03
  12. N.M.R. and chemistry;: An introduction to nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (Chapman and Hall chemistry textbook series) by J. W Akitt, 1973
  13. Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Principles and Theory (Studies in Physical and Theoretical Chemistry) by R. Kitamaru, 1990-05-23
  14. Handbook of Nuclear Chemistry. Volume 4: Radiochemistry and Radiopharmaceutical Chemistry in Life Sciences by Attila Vertes, Sandor Nagy, et all 2003-11-01

41. The Living Textbook Of Nuclear Chemistry
American Chemical Society The Living Textbook of nuclear chemistry.The Living Textbook of nuclear chemistry is an attempt to gather
http://livingtextbook.oregonstate.edu/
The Living Textbook of Nuclear Chemistry
The Living Textbook of Nuclear Chemistry is an attempt to gather on a single website a number of supplemental materials related to the study and practice of nuclear chemistry. Among these materials are:
Acknowledgments Note: This site is best viewed with Macromedia Flash Player and Quicktime Player. RealPlayer is also supported.

42. Nuclear Chemistry Home Page
nuclear chemistry at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory ( PNNL).Advanced Technology for Radiation Sensing; Barrell Scanner; Detector
http://www.pnl.gov/fiber/
Nuclear Chemistry at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory ( PNNL
Questions or comments may be directed to Mary Bliss
Last Updated: August 9, 1999

43. Department Of Chemistry - University Of California At Berkeley - Faculty By Name
nuclear chemistry. Arup Chakraborty, 6429275 101B Gilman Hall, arup@uclink.berkeley.edu. DarleaneC. Hoffman, 486-4474 LBL 70-319, hoffman@lbl.gov. nuclear chemistry.
http://chem.berkeley.edu/people/people_faculty.html
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Chemistry People
: Faculty by Name A-E F-L M-R S-Z Information is available for the following faculty, listed with their research interests. To see the Chemistry Emeritus Faculty, visit the Emeritus Faculty page . All phone numbers are area code (510) unless stated otherwise. A. Paul Alivisatos
B62 Hildebrand Hall ALIVIS@uclink4.Berkeley.EDU Materials and Solid State Chemistry; Physical Chemistry
Richard A. Andersen

537 Latimer Hall raandersen@lbl.gov Inorganic and Organometallic Chemistry Adam P. Arkin
144 Melvin Calvin Lab
aparkin@lbl.gov
Biophysical Chemistry and Bioengineering
John Arnold

526 Latimer Hall arnold@socrates.berkeley.edu Organometallic, Polymers and Materials Chemistry; Catalysis
Paul A. Bartlett

841 Latimer Hall bartlett@cchem.berkeley.edu

44. Nuclear Chemistry - Lembit Sihver
To Chalmers HomePage. nuclear chemistry. Lembit Sihver was appointedprofessor of nuclear chemistry in March 2002. He was born in
http://www.chalmers.se/Hypertext/Prof-E/Sihver-E.html
Select information Careers Service Directory Int Master Programs Library News Summary Organisation PhD Programmes Presentation Search information Student Union Vacancies Nuclear chemistry Lembit Sihver
Summary of the research
Lembit Sihver's licentiate and doctoral studies dealt mainly with experimental studies of target fragments formed in high-energy, heavy-ion collisions. He worked a great deal in the USA, including Oregon State University, where he began his research career, and at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. He also performed experiments at different accelerator complexes around the world. During his years as a guest researcher in Japan and Germany, Lembit Sihver developed, among other things, models for calculating dose allocations when using heavy ions for cancer treatment, and for calculating exposure of cosmic rays in space and the galactic cosmic rays measured by ESA's and NASA's spacecraft. During this time he started up a major international collaboration project with researchers from, among others, NASA and NASDA and this is still in progress. During the period 1995-2002, Lembit Sihver worked first at ABB Atom AB and then Westinghouse Atom AB, which in 2000 purchased ABB Atom AB. At ABB Atom / Westinghouse Lembit Sihver worked as a project manager, product group manager and senior specialist and was, among other things, responsible for research and development within nuclear fuel integrity and nuclear fuel reliability, the development of new detector systems and the organisation of international research and development programmes. During this time he developed nuclear fuel courses, which he also ran at the Royal Institute of Technology.

45. Nuclear Chemistry Group GSI Darmstadt
Translate this page Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung mbH, Darmstadt, Germany. AKTUELLES. KernchemieGruppe. NEWS. nuclear chemistry Group. Hier geht es zu den Deutschen Seiten.
http://www-wnt.gsi.de/kernchemie/
Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung mbH, Darmstadt, Germany AKTUELLES Kernchemie
Gruppe NEWS Nuclear
Chemistry
Group Hier geht es zu den
Deutschen Seiten
Take this way for the
English Version

46. SCIENTECH, Inc. - Nuclear Chemistry/Radiochemistry Data Evaluation & Interpretat
Course Schedule. The schedule for the nuclear chemistry/RadiochemistryData Evaluation Interpretation Course is as follows When Where
http://secure.scientech.com/conferences/details.asp?ProductID=1064

47. AUS-e-TUTE For Astute Students
Developed by experienced science teachers to provide free chemistry tutorials designed for high school Category Science Chemistry Education...... Physical Chemistry (~633 questions) Equilibrium Electrochemistry Energy Fuels Power Generation Gas Laws nuclear chemistry Reaction Rates.
http://www.ausetute.com.au/
Your browser is not running javascript. Parts of this page will not work Contact AUS-e-TUTE Apply for Membership A U S - e - T U T E A U S - e - T U T E CHEMISTRY TUTORIALS Members Only Enter Test Centre Lost your password?
Click here
... Click to Close INFORMATION
AUS-e-TUTE has been developed by experienced Science Teachers to provide FREE chemistry tutorials designed for High School Chemistry Students. AUS-e-TUTE membership allows you to access the MEMBERS ONLY area which provides you with test and exam questions and answers for the following topics:
  • Basic Skills
    (~925 questions)
    Matter
    Atomic Structure
    electronic configuration
    Bonding
    Periodic Table
    Formulae
    Chemical Equations
    Chemical Calculations
    (Stoichiometry) Safety in the Lab
  • Organic Chemistry (~674 questions)
    Nomenclature Structural Isomers Properties Reactions Biological Chemistry Food Chemistry
  • Physical Chemistry (~655 questions)
    Equilibrium Electrochemistry Gas Laws Nuclear Chemistry Reaction Rates
  • Analytical Chemistry (~295 questions)
    Gravimetric Analysis REDOX Titrations Spectroscopy
  • Environmental Chemistry (~52 questions)
    Nitrogen Cycle Atmosphere Acid Rain Water Nuclear
New Tutorials and new Test and Exam Questions are added to this site regularly.

48. Tutorials-7
Project). nuclear chemistry nuclear. nuclear chemistry notes (WiltonHigh School) just what is nuclear chemistry anyway? (Marburg
http://www.chemistrycoach.com/tutorials-7.htm
tutorials with emphasis on applicability to high school chemistry last updated 10/6/02 links verified 3/16/02
All of the following tutorials should be useful for high school chemistry.
Those
of special merit to Chemistry Coach are identified with a tutorials: page home
Mathematical Skills have outgrown this page and have moved to another page: Click to go there
Classification Schemes ...
Environmental Chemistry
Energy
thermal
sources of energy (Logan)
the nature of energy
(Markham HS)
energy types
(Markham HS)
temperature and heat

heat and temperature
(Queens University)
heat and temperature
(University of Missouri)
heat and temperature
(University of Maryland-BC)
heat and temperature review questions
(Mansfield Middle School)
heat and temperature
(science museum) heat and temperature (Nathaniel Smith) temperature changes and heat (Wiger) introduction to energy, temperature, and heat (St. Louis University) the caloric theory of heat and ideas about temperature (Brown University) an attempt to oversome alternative conceptions related to heat and temperature (Brown University) It's all about heat and temperature!

49. Gradebook For DrJ 4F
nuclear chemistry Notes. (this page is in the process of being constructed).While these notes were compiled from a variety of sources
http://www.chemistrycoach.com/nuclearchem.htm
Nuclear Chemistry Notes
(this page is in the process of being constructed) While these notes were compiled from a variety of sources, the principal organizing reference was Chemistry, The Central Science, Brown, LeMay, Bursten. Definitions Nucleons : Subatomic particles in the nucleus : protons and neutrons
Radionucleotides : Radioactive nuclei. Unstable nuclei that spontaneously emit particles and electromagnetic radiation.
Radioisotopes : Atoms containing radioactive nuclei. Types of Radioactive Decay When unstable nuclei decay, the reactions they undergo generally involve one or more of the following particles listed in the first column. Some facts about these particles may be found in the next 5 columns. In the 7th column you will find an example of each type of decay. Notice that for an alpha particle decay, the equation is balanced with regard to atomic number (92, 90+2) and atomic weight (238, 234+4). This type of balancing is true for all nuclear reactions. In the last column are instructions for how to predict when each type of emission or capture will occur. Fore example, if the atomic number is greater than 83, alpha particle decay is most likely. particle What is it?

50. Index Of Help Files For Nuclear Chemistry
Help files for nuclear chemistry. Atomic components; Proton; Neutron;Electron; The nucleus; Atomic nomenclature; Radioactive decay; Alpha
http://learn.chem.vt.edu/tutorials/nuclear/

51. Laboratory Of Inorganic And Nuclear Chemistry
Laboratory of Inorganic and nuclear chemistry, New York State Department of Health. Returnto Previous Page Laboratory of Inorganic and nuclear chemistry.
http://www.wadsworth.org/testing/nuclear.htm
Navigate Wadsworth
Navigate

Wadsworth

Laboratory Services: Laboratory and Testing Programs
Return to Previous Page
Laboratory of Inorganic and Nuclear Chemistry The laboratory conducts State and federally mandated chemical and radioactivity analyses in drinking water, air, surface water, industrial and municipal discharges, soils and sediments, fossil fuels, waste oil, vegetation and food stuffs. Analyses are performed to assess health hazards resulting from chemical spills and discharges, and to evaluate potentially unsafe living and work environments. The laboratory maintains an emergency response capability in the event of a large-scale nuclear power plant accident. In such an emergency, a large number of environmental and food samples would be rapidly measured to evaluate the accident's impact on public health and the protective actions needed. About Wadsworth Affiliations Education Laboratory Services ... Wadsworth HOME A JavaScript is being used for formatting purposes only. Today's Date is generated by a JavaScript Script to detect browser type. You may access the same information by going to your browser's HELP to determine which version of the browser is being used.

52. ONR-Supported Nobel Laureates
discoveries concerning the energy production in stars. General Applicationsnuclear chemistry Naval Applications Nuclear engineering.
http://www.onr.navy.mil/events/nobels/default.htm
ONR-Supported Nobel Laureates ONR is pleased to recognize the achievements of 3 more ONR-sponsored Nobel Laureates "for the achievement of Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms, and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates."
  • Eric Cornell (JILA and NIST) Carl Wieman (JILA and University of Colorado) Wolfgang Ketterle (MIT)
View a video-interview with Wolfgang Ketterle
(you may need Windows Media Player to view) Transcript of video View a list of all 2001 Nobel Prize winners
All ONR- Sponsored Nobel Laureates Felix Bloch - (Physics, 1952)
For developing techniques of magnetic measurement in atomic nuclei.
General Applications: Magnetic resonance imagery
Naval Applications: Naval medicine; nondestructive inspection Linus Pauling - (Chemistry, 1954)
For research into the nature of the chemical bond and its application to the elucidation of the structure of complex substances.
General Applications: Modern physical chemistry; modern biochemistry

53. DEFAULT
Welcome to the Radiochemistry and nuclear chemistry Homepage! The3rd edition of Choppin, Liljenzin, Rydberg Radiochemistry and
http://book.nc.chalmers.se/
Welcome to the Radiochemistry and Nuclear Chemistry Homepage!
The 3:rd edition of Choppin, Liljenzin, Rydberg "Radiochemistry and Nuclear Chemistry" was published by Butterworth-Heinemann in october this year.
Mail to Webmaster (Updated 2001-10-04)

54. RS 21-7-100 Darleane C. Hoffman
Group (19531971); Associate Group Leader of the Radiochemistry Group (1971-1979);Division Leader of the Chemistry-nuclear chemistry Division (1979-1982); and
http://www.lib.iastate.edu/arch/rgrp/21-7-100.html
RS 21/7/100
Darleane C. Hoffman
Papers, 1952-1993, n.d.
Special Collections Department
403 Parks Library
Iowa State University
Ames, IA 50011-2140
Descriptive summary
Administrative information Biographical/Historical note
Collection description
... Description of series/container list Acquisition: Records donated by Darleane C. Hoffman in 1994. (Accession #94-0083 and #99-0106) Access: Open for research. Other forms: Photographs in Box 5, folder 6. Processed by: Tanya L. Zanish, February 1995
Biographical Note Darleane Christian Hoffman was born in 1926 and received her B.S. (1948) in Chemistry and her Ph.D (1951) in Physical (Nuclear) Chemistry from Iowa State University. She was employed as a chemist (1952-1953) at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory and was a staff member of the Radiochemistry Group (1953-1971); Associate Group Leader of the Radiochemistry Group (1971-1979); Division Leader of the Chemistry-Nuclear Chemistry Division (1979-1982); and Division Leader of the Isotope and Nuclear Chemistry Division (1982-1984), all at the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory. From 1984 till 1991 she was a professor in the Department of Chemistry at the University of California at Berkeley and professor emeritus from 1991 until 1993.

55. WISE Archives: Oral History Collection--Bryant Mather Biography
Group (19531971); Associate Group Leade r of the Radiochemistry Group (1971-1979);Division Leader of the Chemistry-nuclear chemistry Division (1979-1982
http://www.lib.iastate.edu/spcl/wise/hoffmanbio.html

Special Collections Department
Archives of Women in Science and Engineering
News: Oral History Project

How You Can Help!

MS 379: ORAL HISTORY COLLECTION
Darleane C. Hoffman Biography Biographical Note Her research interests include rapid chemical separation of short-lived fiss ion products; nuclear structure; chemical and nuclear properties of the heaviest elements; studies of the spontaneous fission process; heavy ion reactions; and the search for heavy elements in nature. Among Hoffman’s accomplishments are her discovery of plutonium-244 in nature and conducting the first aqueous chemistry on element 105. She is a member of numerous professional organizations and advisory committees, including the American Chemical Society (Fellow), the American Institute of Chemists, the American Physical Society, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and other honorary societies. Among the awards she has received are the John Dustin Clark Award (1976), the American Chemical Society Award for Nuclear Chemistry (1983), and the Garvan Medal (1990) for contributions to the physics and chemistry of the heaviest elements. Tanya Zanish-Belcher , Curator
Special Collections Department

Iowa State University Library
, Ames, IA 50011-4120

56. Home Page
Interactions; Heavy Elements and nuclear chemistry. Relativistic NuclearCollisions (RNC) STAR Detector and Simulations; Relativistic
http://www-nsd.lbl.gov/nsd/annual/ydc/nsd1999.html
US Government User-Notice
LBNL-45341
1999 Annual Report
Nuclear Science Division
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Prepared for the U.S. Department of Energy under contract No. DE-AC03-76SF00098
Cover Page [pdf]
Program Overview
  • 88-Inch Cyclotron Operations [ps] [pdf]
    C.M. Lyneis
  • Low Energy Program [ps] [pdf]
    I.Y. Lee
  • Relativistic Nuclear Collisions [ps] [pdf]
    H.G. Ritter
  • Institute for Nuclear and Particle Astrophysics [ps] [pdf]
    R.G. Stokstad
  • Nuclear Data Evaluation : Isotopes Project [ps] [pdf]
    E.B. Norman
  • Theory [ps] [pdf]
    X.N. Wang
List of Contributions

57. IUB Chemistry - Victor E. Viola
Victor E. Viola. Distinguished Professor nuclear chemistry. AB, Universityof Kansas, 1957. Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley, 1961.
http://www.chem.indiana.edu/personnel/faculty/viola/viola.htm
Victor E. Viola
Distinguished Professor
Nuclear Chemistry
A.B., University of Kansas, 1957.
Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley, 1961.
Postdoctoral Fellow, University of California, 1961-62.
NSF and Ford Postdoctoral Fellow, Centre Europeénne pour la Recherche Nucléaire, Geneva, Switzerland, 1963-64.
Research Associate, Argonne National Laboratory, 1964-66 Phone: (812) 855-6537
Email: vicv@iucf.indiana.edu
Viola Group Home Page

Selected Publications

ACS Award for Nuclear Chemistry, 1986; Chairman, Division of Nuclear Chemistry and Technology, American Chemical Society, 1980; Guggenheim Fellow, 1980-81; Fellow, American Physical Society, 1986; Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1987; Indiana University Teaching Excellence Recognition Award, 1998; Tracy M. Sonneborn Award, 2000.
Determining the properties of nuclear matter as a function of density, temperature, and composition is one of the fundamental goals of nuclear science. The resulting nuclear equation of state is essential, not only for understanding terrestrial experiments with nuclei, but also for describing astrophysical systems—for example, the aggregation of nuclear matter to form stars, and their subsequent evolution into supernovae, neutron stars, or black holes. In order to address this problem, our group is currently investigating the formation dynamics and decay mechanisms of hot nuclear matter. Such systems are formed in the collision of energetic nuclear projectiles with complex target nuclei, and are studied using nuclear particle accelerators.

58. Department Of Chemistry, Nuclear Chemistry
Kungl Tekniska Högskolan Dept. of Chem., nuclear chemistry, KTH/ Department of Chemistry / nuclear chemistry, nuclear chemistry.
http://www.kemi.kth.se/nuchem/eng/

Search employees at KTH

Dept. of Chem., Nuclear Chemistry
KTH
Department of Chemistry / Nuclear Chemistry Nuclear Chemistry
Staff
Research Education » Publications ... Degree Projects
Nuclear Chemistry
Welcome to Nuclear Chemistry at the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH).
The activities at Nuclear Chemistry is primarily focused on radio chemistry and radiation chemistry. In radio chemistry radioactive isotopes (radionuclides) are used to study chemical processes while radiation chemistry studies chemical processes induced by ionising radiation (mostly radical chemistry).
19 people work at the division of which 6 are PhD-students.
The 5th of March Erik E. Johansson became doctor!
Read the abstract of his thesis here
Acting Head , phone: +46 - 8 -790 80 97,
e-mail: torbreit@nuchem.kth.se Vice Head Johan Lind , phone: +46 - 8 -790 80 96, e-mail: jl@nuchem.kth.se

59. History -- Nuclear Chemistry
nuclear chemistry
http://chemed.chem.purdue.edu/genchem/topicreview/bp/ch23/history.html
Nuclear Chemistry Discovery of the Particles Growth and Decay Curves The Structure of the Atom Discovery of Particles The discovery of x-rays by William Conrad Roentgen in November of 1895 excited the imagination of a generation of scientists who rushed to study this phenomenon. Within a few months, Henri Becquerel found that both uranium metal and salts of this element gave off a different form of radiation, which could also pass through solids. By 1898, Marie Curie found that compounds of thorium were also "radioactive." After pain-staking effort she eventually isolated two more radioactive elements polonium and radium from ores that contained uranium. In 1899 Ernest Rutherford found that there were at least two different forms of radioactivity when he studied the absorption of radioactivity by thin sheets of metal foil. One, which he called alpha ( ) particles , were absorbed by metal foil that was a few hundredths of a centimeter thick. The other, beta (ß) particles , could pass through 100 times as much metal foil before they became absorbed. Shortly thereafter, a third form of radiation, gamma ( ) rays , was discovered that could penetrate as much as several centimeters of lead.

60. Los Alamos' Sattelberger Elected AAAS Fellow
of Michigan. He moved to Los Alamos in 1984, working as a staff memberin the Isotope and nuclear chemistry Division. Since 1988
http://www.lanl.gov/worldview/news/releases/archive/02-123.shtml
News Releases News Releases by Subject
by Organization
... Contacts
Los Alamos' Sattelberger elected AAAS Fellow
Contact: Bill Dupuy, wdupuy@lanl.gov Recent News "Wildfire 2003" public meeting set for April 15 Acting Deputy Director named at Los Alamos National Laboratory
Los Alamos weapons X-ray facility completed Enter, Albert named 2003 Outstanding Women by State Commission Celebration of Los Alamos National Laboratory's 60th anniversary begins April 7 Laboratory's Mee named Minority Small Business Advocate of Year Laboratory flips the mercury 'off' switch Thinning crews are working in Pajarito Acres area New high-purity plutonium sources produced at Los Alamos Cosmic particles find potential role in homeland security LOS ALAMOS, N.M., Nov. 12, 2002 Alfred P. Sattelberger of the Department of Energy's Los Alamos National Laboratory has been elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). AAAS is a nonprofit professional society dedicated to the advancement of scientific and technological excellence across all disciplines, and to the public's understanding of science and technology. AAAS membership comprises more than 134,000 scientists, engineers, science educators, policymakers and other professionals worldwide.

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