Notre Dame Environmental Radiochemistry Laboratory

Notre Dame Environmental Radiochemistry Laboratory We are an environmental radiochemistry laboratory at the University of Notre Dame researching all aspects of the nuclear fuel cycle.

Congratulations to Manny, who successfully defended his dissertation! You’re a doctor now!
03/27/2024

Congratulations to Manny, who successfully defended his dissertation! You’re a doctor now!

02/21/2024

Interested in learning more about GLOBES? Stop by The Reilly Center (219 O’Shaughnessy Hall) on Thursday February 29th for our open house!! Hope to see you there!!!

08/31/2023

Join us on Thursday September 7th at 5:30 pm in 120 DeBartolo Hall to hear from Mallery Quetawki, an artist and a member of Zuni Pueblo who uses her art to communicate environmental and health science to Native communities

We're excited to be part of receiving and reassembling NAUTILUS here on campus!
08/21/2023

We're excited to be part of receiving and reassembling NAUTILUS here on campus!

The United States Navy has transferred NAUTILUS, a one-of-a-kind system for materials analysis, to the University of Notre Dame.

The Hixon group is so proud of you, Audrey!  Keep up the good work and see you at future conferences!
05/25/2023

The Hixon group is so proud of you, Audrey! Keep up the good work and see you at future conferences!

Way to go, Audrey!
05/17/2023

Way to go, Audrey!

Please join me in congratulating Kyson, who passed his doctoral defense earlier today. Congrats, Dr. Smith!
03/24/2023

Please join me in congratulating Kyson, who passed his doctoral defense earlier today. Congrats, Dr. Smith!

The Hixon Group is excited to be a partner in the new NNSA Consortium for Nuclear Forensics!
02/01/2023

The Hixon Group is excited to be a partner in the new NNSA Consortium for Nuclear Forensics!

The Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration announced the establishment of a $25 million cooperative agreement with a University of Florida-led consortium of 16 universities for research in nuclear forensics.

03/28/2022

Clad in rubber waders, Connor Parker stepped into thigh-deep mud and dipped a test tube below the surface of a murky brown creek to demonstrate the research he has been conducting under Brian Powell since arriving at Clemson University nearly five years ago.

Connor’s work shows that even as computers take on increasing importance, researchers like him still need to get out of the lab and literally get their hands dirty. It’s a great opportunity for an “outdoors guy,” he said.

“I just love it,” Connor said.

On that day, Connor was about two weeks from defending his dissertation and was on track to graduate in May with his doctorate in environmental engineering and Earth sciences. For his dissertation, he collaborated with Savannah River National Laboratory to study uranium transport using geochemical and radiation detection methods.

With his degree program, Connor is helping beat a path that has formed between Clemson and his undergraduate alma mater, the University of Notre Dame.

Connor learned about Clemson from his advisor at Notre Dame, Amy Hixon, who also had Dr. Powell as an advisor when she was a graduate student at Clemson. Now an associate professor, Dr. Hixon holds master’s and Ph.D. degrees from Clemson in environmental engineering and Earth sciences.

The Clemson-Notre Dame connection also includes Connor’s “science big sister,” Kathryn Peruski, who also received her undergraduate degree from Notre Dame before becoming one of Powell’s students at Clemson. She received her Ph.D. in 2020 and now works as an R&D associate radiochemist/radiochemical engineer at Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

Connor said that Dr. Powell set a good example of how to strike a work-life balance and show appreciation, including a recent text he sent. It was a photo of the blood-orange beer that Dr. Powell crafts once a year, along with a message that it would be waiting for Connor the day after his defense.

“It was neat that he knew it would be something I would appreciate, and this was his way of saying, ‘You’ve done a good job, and you’re almost done,” Connor said.

As graduation nears, Connor is looking for an opportunity to become a postdoctoral researcher at a national lab.

04/27/2021

Join SPI for the last forum of the semester on Thursday, April 29th at 5:30 pm.

ND-GAIN (Global Adaptation Initiative) aims to motivate communities to build social, physical and natural systems that save lives and improve livelihoods, protect our environment, and strengthen market and policy positions. ND-GAIN has developed an annual Country Index and new Urban Adaptation Assessment which serve as platforms that enable leaders to make informed decisions across critical environmental, economic and social sectors. Dr. Danielle Wood will discuss decision support tools and how information from research can be translated into policy on a macro level.

Zoom meeting: https://notredame.zoom.us/j/95402949494

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301 Stinson-Remick Hall, University Of
Notre Dame, IN
46556

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