Valeria Molinero

Valeria Paula Molinero is an Argentinian physicist who is the Jack and Peg Simons Endowed Professor of Theoretical Chemistry at the University of Utah.[1][2] Her research investigates the simulation of the behavior of materials. She was awarded the American Physical Society Irving Langmuir Award in Chemical Physics in 2023.

Valeria Molinero
Born
Valeria Paula Molinero

1970 (age 53–54)
Alma materUniversity of Buenos Aires
AwardsMember of the National Academy of Sciences (2022)
Scientific career
FieldsChemistry[1]
InstitutionsUniversity of Utah
California Institute of Technology
Arizona State University
ThesisAspectos de equilibrio y dinámicos de solvatación en nanoagregados polares binarios (1999)
Websitemolinero.hec.utah.edu Edit this at Wikidata

Early life and education

Molinero was born in Argentina.[3][4] She earned her undergraduate and doctorate degrees and was a doctoral researcher at the University of Buenos Aires, where she specialized in electrochemistry.[5]

Research and career

After her PhD, Molinero moved to the California Institute of Technology and Arizona State University for postdoctoral research, working alongside Austen Angell and William Andrew Goddard III.[5]

In 2006, Molinero joined the University of Utah, where she built a research program focused on the use of computer simulations to understand the structure and phase dynamics of materials.[6] Her research has mainly investigated the transition between water and ice, and how the environment in which that transition occurs (e.g. in the production of ice cream, in clouds, in anti-freeze) influences the process.[7]

Molinero has developed simulations to understand the materials properties of zeolites, and to predict the specific polymorph from a synthesis mixture.[8] In 2020, she investigated the smallest limits of ice, showing that in nanodroplets of fewer than 90 molecules of water it is impossible for ice to form.[9][10]

Awards and honors

Selected publications

As of 2023 according to Google scholar[1] her most cited publications are:

  • Valeria Molinero; Emily B Moore (1 April 2009). "Water modeled as an intermediate element between carbon and silicon". The Journal of Physical Chemistry B. 113 (13): 4008–4016. arXiv:0809.2811. doi:10.1021/JP805227C. ISSN 1520-6106. PMID 18956896. Wikidata Q46289790.
  • Emily B Moore; Valeria Molinero (23 November 2011). "Structural transformation in supercooled water controls the crystallization rate of ice". Nature. 479 (7374): 506–508. arXiv:1107.1622. doi:10.1038/NATURE10586. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 22113691. Wikidata Q34235591.
  • Liam C. Jacobson; Waldemar Hujo; Valeria Molinero (1 August 2010). "Amorphous Precursors in the Nucleation of Clathrate Hydrates". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 132 (33): 11806–11811. doi:10.1021/JA1051445. ISSN 0002-7863. PMID 20669949. Wikidata Q54278459.

References