Lawrenceville, N.J. native and Boston College senior Julia Curley has been awarded a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship to pursue her doctorate in chemistry at Yale University.

Julia Curley
Julia Curley '16. (Ed Hayward)

Curley, who graduated summa cum laude from Ļć½¶Šć on May 23, majored in chemistry and minored in math. She plans to study organic chemistry at Yale, with a focus on developing alternative energy sources and materials through sustainable, green chemistry innovations.

ā€œI am honored to receive this fellowship from the National Science Foundation to support my graduate research,ā€ said Curley. ā€œThis fellowship gives me the opportunity to fund the research that I want to pursue at Yale in organo-metallic chemistry with a focus on environmental applicationsā€”such as renewable energy sources and biodegradable plastics."

Curley, a 2012 graduate of The Hun School of Princeton, N.J., is the daughter of Edward and Ann Curley, who now reside on Cape Cod, Mass.

ā€œMy parents raised me to be respectful of the environment and that is something I feel passionately about, so I am looking forward to combining my interests in chemistry and the environment as part of my graduate studies,ā€ said Curley.

The NSF awarded the ā€œpre-docā€ fellowships to 2,000 men and women from nearly 18,000 applicants in 2016. The award provides three years of financial support within a five-year period, covering an annual stipend of up to $34,000 and tuition costs of up to $12,000 for graduate study that leads to a research-based masterā€™s or doctoral degree in science or engineering, according to the NSF.

Curley focused on organo-metallic chemistry as an undergraduate, conducting research in the lab of Assistant Professor of Chemistry Jeff Byers for the past two-and-a-half years.

ā€œIn addition to being a great researcher, Julia was an excellent student,ā€ said Byers. ā€œShe routinely was at the top or near the top of every class that she took in the chemistry department. She challenged herself with a demanding course load that included some of the toughest classes that we offer at Boston College.ā€

Curley was a co-author on a recently published paper in the respected German academic journal Angewandte Chemie.

ā€œBoston College definitely prepared me very well,ā€ said Curley.Ā  ā€œWorking in Professor Byersā€™ lab, I learned how to be a scientist and thatā€™s where I learned I wanted to pursue graduate studies in chemistry. All of my professors at Ļć½¶Šć have prepared me well for graduate school.ā€

Curley was one of the co-founders who revived the undergraduate student chapter of the American Chemical Society at Ļć½¶Šć, serving as its president. Among her academic honors, Curley has been named a Sophomore Scholar, a Deanā€™s Scholar and a Scholar of the College.

She is a member of the Phi Beta Kappa national honor society and the Honors Program of the Morrissey College of Arts & Sciences.

By Ed Hayward | News & Public Affairs