Duke Chemistry PhD Wins International Prize for Outstanding Thesis

Duke chemistry Ph.D. has been awarded the international for outstanding thesis in magnetic resonance.
In the clinic, magnetic resonance techniques are used to peer inside the body and monitor molecular changes associated with diseases such as cancer or Alzheimer鈥檚, without using harmful radiation like X-rays and CT scans do.
There鈥檚 just one major limitation: the technique鈥檚 low signal-to-noise ratio means that molecules that are too few or fleeting can be hard to detect.
尝颈苍诲补濒别鈥檚 , supervised by Duke chemistry professor , re-examines and re-frames the theoretical underpinnings of new, low-cost 鈥渉yperpolarization鈥 methods aimed at getting around this problem.
The prize was presented July 10, 2022, during the conference in Utrecht, Netherlands.