Tina Nenoff
Tina M. Nenoff (born 1965) is an American materials scientist and chemical engineer who works as a senior scientist and Sandia Fellow at Sandia National Laboratories, on leave from Sandia for a two-year term as deputy and science advisor to Jill Hruby, the Under Secretary of Energy for Nuclear Security. Her research concerns nanoporous materials such as zeolites and metal–organic frameworks, and their applications including reverse osmosis, water splitting for the hydrogen economy, and the detection and sequestration of radioactive iodine produced as nuclear waste. She also developed use of crystalline silicotitanates (discovered by [https://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/ie00035a020 Anthony and Dosch]) to remove radioactive cesium from contaminated seawater after the Fukushima nuclear accident. Provided by Wikipedia
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Design Elements for Enhanced Hydrogen Isotope Separations in Barely Porous Organic Cages by Dayton J. Vogel, Tina M. Nenoff, Jessica M. Rimsza
Published 2022-02-01
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Poly[guanidinium [tri-μ-formato-κ6O:O′-formato-κ2O,O′-yttrium(III)]] by Mark A. Rodriguez, Dorina F. Sava Gallis, Tina M. Nenoff
Published 2014-07-01
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Microwave response in a topological superconducting quantum interference device by Wei Pan, Daniel Soh, Wenlong Yu, Paul Davids, Tina M. Nenoff
Published 2021-04-01
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