Bruker EPR is offering an online CW EPR User Training Course the week of June 21.
We encourage people that are starting to use EPR in their studies and work to attend. Emphasis is on larger spectrometers, but people using an EMXnano benchtop system will find the topics informative.
You will learn about EPR practice and principles as well as important EPR applications.
June 21 - 25, 2021
The course is offered between 11:00-1:00 EDT with a five-minute break in the middle. The classes will be a mixture of lectures and practical laboratory demonstrations.
Dr. Boris Dzikovski
Applications Scientist
Boris Dzikovski is a co-author of over 50 publications on applications of EPR spectroscopy in chemistry, biophysics, and material science. Before joining the Bruker EPR applications team, he worked for 17 years at the National Biomedical Center for Advanced Electron Spin Resonance Technologies led by Prof. Jack H. Freed at Cornell University.
Dr. Kalina Ranguelova
Senior EPR Applications Scientist, Bruker BioSpin
Dr. Kalina Ranguelova has been an EPR Applications Scientist at Bruker BioSpin Corporation since 2011. She completed her Ph.D. at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, where her research focused on the structure of inorganic copper complexes using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. After holding research positions at CUNY and the National Institute for Environmental Sciences, where she studied free radical biology and EPR spin trapping as a method for measuring reactive oxygen species (ROS), she joined Bruker. In her current role as an Applications Scientist, she focuses on developing new applications for EPR in various fields and providing customer support and training.
Dr. Ralph Weber
Senior EPR Applications Scientist, Bruker BioSpin
Dr. Ralph Weber started his scientific training at Brown University where he received a B.A in Chemistry and German Literature and Language. He continued his training at the University of Chicago, earning a Ph.D. in chemistry focusing on EPR and ENDOR studies of proteins and lanthanide complexes. Two postdoctoral positions followed. At Leiden University in the Netherlands he studied excited states of molecules using ODMR (Optically Detected Magnetic Resonance) and designed and constructed a high frequency pulse EPR spectrometer. At MIT he studied motional dynamics in lipids via solid state NMR and was one of the original project members to design and construct a DNP (Dynamic Nuclear Polarization) spectrometer incorporating a high power gyrotron. He joined Bruker 29 years ago in 1989. He is responsible for much of the documentation for EPR and also offers customer support for pulse, high frequency, and imaging applications. He is currently co-principal investigator on a five-year NIH grant to develop pre-clinical EPR imaging technology and to promote its use in the pharmaceutical industry.