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Betty Harris (scientist)

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Nationality
  
United States

Name
  
Betty Harris


Role
  
Chemist

Fields
  
Betty Harris smiling with a short hair while wearing eyeglasses and a shirt under a blouse with V shape neckline

Born
  
29 July 1940Monroe, Louisiana (
1940-07-29
)

Known for
  
chemistry of explosives

Alma mater
  
Southern University and A&M College, Clark Atlanta University, University of New Mexico

3 eminent scientists dr betty harris


Dr. Betty Wright Harris is an American chemist. She is known for her work on the chemistry of explosives completed at Los Alamos National Laboratory. She patented a spot test for detecting 1,3,5-triamino-2,4,6-trinitrobenzene (TATB) in the field.

Contents

Betty Harris smiling with a short hair while wearing eyeglasses, earrings, a necklace, and a blue blouse with a collar

Early life and education

Dr. Harris was born on 29 July 1940 in Ouachita Parish, Monroe, Louisiana. She and her 11 siblings were raised on a farm by Henry Hudson "Jake" and Legertha Evelyn Thompson Wright. She attended Union Central High School, enrolling at Southern University at the age of 16. She received her B.S. in science at the age of 19 and subsequently attended Atlanta University, receiving her M.S. degree. She taught as an assistant professor of chemistry and mathematics at Mississippi Valley State University, Southern University and Colorado College.

Harris was awarded a PhD in Chemistry from the University of New Mexico in 1975, with a dissertation titled "Reactions of 2-aminopyridine with picryl halides".

Career

After gaining her PhD, Harris moved to do research at Los Alamos National Laboratory, where she worked in the areas of hazardous waste treatment and environmental remediation as well as explosives chemistry. Areas of focus included explosives detection, safing liquids, synthesis and characterization of insensitive high explosives and sensitivity of weathered high explosives. In addition to her research, she has worked in outreach to young people, including working with the Girl Scouts in developing a badge based on chemistry.

During a leave of absence from LANL, Dr. Harris was the chief of chemical technology for Solar Turbine Inc., where she managed the technical laboratories and investigated cold-end corrosion of super alloys, which was caused by sulfuric acid and soot in gas turbine engines. For the last eleven years of Dr. Harris’s career, she worked at the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Classification as a certified document reviewer.

She has received the New Mexico Governor's Trailblazer Award. She is recognized as a distinguished African American Scientist by the National Academy of Sciences. She is a 50-year member of the American Chemical Society. Dr. Harris currently lives in Maryland and has three children: Selita Harris Lucas, Jeffrey Harris and Alloyd A. Harris, II.

Patent

  • Harris, U.S. Patent 4,618,452, "Spot test for 1,3,5-triamino-2,4,6-trinitrobenzene, TATB" US patent 4618452, Dr. Betty Harris, "Spot test for 1,3,5-triamino-2,4,6-trinitrobenzene, TATB", published November 29, 1984 
  • References

    Betty Harris (scientist) Wikipedia