Icon representing individual honors showing a Nobel Prize medal
CQN Professor wins MacArthur Fellowship

Danna Freedman, the F.G. Keyes Professor of Chemistry at MIT, has been named a recipient of a 2022 MacArthur Fellowship. Dr. Freedman is a principal investigator in the NSF-funded Center for Quantum Networks.

Often referred to as “genius grants,” the fellowships come with a five-year, $800,000 prize, which recipients are free to use as they see fit. Freedman, who found out about the award in early September, before it was publicly announced, said she was “completely in shock” after hearing that she had been chosen for the fellowship.

Freedman, whose research focuses on using inorganic chemistry to create new molecules for quantum information science, joined the MIT faculty in 2021. Before coming to MIT, she was a professor of chemistry at Northwestern University.

Image
Credit:
CQN / MIT

Location

Tucson, Arizona

e-mail

info@cqn-erc.org

Start Year

Microelectronics and IT

Microelectronics, Sensing, and Information Technology Icon
Microelectronics, Sensing, and Information Technology Icon

Microelectronics, Sensing, and IT

Lead Institution

University of Arizona

Core Partners

Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Yale University

Fact Sheet

Icon representing individual honors showing a Nobel Prize medal
CQN Professor wins MacArthur Fellowship

Image
Credit:
CQN / MIT

Location

Tucson, Arizona

e-mail

info@cqn-erc.org

Start Year

Microelectronics and IT

Microelectronics, Sensing, and Information Technology Icon
Microelectronics, Sensing, and Information Technology Icon

Microelectronics, Sensing, and IT

Lead Institution

University of Arizona

Core Partners

Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Yale University

Fact Sheet

Danna Freedman, the F.G. Keyes Professor of Chemistry at MIT, has been named a recipient of a 2022 MacArthur Fellowship. Dr. Freedman is a principal investigator in the NSF-funded Center for Quantum Networks.

Often referred to as “genius grants,” the fellowships come with a five-year, $800,000 prize, which recipients are free to use as they see fit. Freedman, who found out about the award in early September, before it was publicly announced, said she was “completely in shock” after hearing that she had been chosen for the fellowship.

Freedman, whose research focuses on using inorganic chemistry to create new molecules for quantum information science, joined the MIT faculty in 2021. Before coming to MIT, she was a professor of chemistry at Northwestern University.