Leah Dodson Wins 2017 Miller Prize

Leah Dodson won the Miller Prize at the 72nd International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy, held June 19鈥23 in Urbana, Illinois. Dodson is an NRC postdoc whose official advisor is Jun Ye, but who primarily works on molecular spectroscopy in the Mathias Weber lab. Her award-winning talk was entitled 鈥淥xalate Formation in Titanium鈥撯揅arbon Dioxide Anionic Clusters Studied by Infrared Photodissociation Spectroscopy.鈥
鈥淟eah gave a nice polished presentation with good organization and clarity,鈥 said Ben McCall, Chair of the International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy, in a letter to Weber announcing the award. 鈥淪he clearly outlined the rationale, the experiment, and the results. She was engaged, excited about her project, and good at thinking on the spot.鈥
Dodson鈥檚 project featured in her talk was the investigation of catalysts in model systems. Specifically, she studied the possible use of titanium dioxide (TiO2) as a catalyst to break carbon-oxygen (C鈥揙) bonds in carbon dioxide (CO2) produced in a factory. Breaking C鈥揙 bonds in CO2听is a key step in turning this greenhouse gas back into usable fuel鈥撯揳nd keeping it out of the atmosphere. Dodson鈥檚 experiment worked surprisingly well. In the experiment, TiO2听anions effectively broke CO2听molecules, forming metal carbonyl in the process. This experiment was the basis for her symposium talk, which resulted in the Miller Prize.
As a Miller Prize winner, Dodson has been invited to present a 15-min talk in one of the plenary sessions in the June 2018 symposium. Dodson will also serve as a judge in the 2018 Miller Prize competition. In addition, she and her听coauthors have been invited to submit an article based on her talk at this year鈥檚 symposium to the Journal of Molecular Spectroscopy.听