Chemistry Thesis Transmuted into Comic Book

As thesis writing approached, University of Wisconsin-Madison graduate student Veronica Berns faced a conundrum. She knew how hard it was to describe her work to friends and family — indeed, anybody outside the tight clan of structural chemists. And that was particularly true since she concentrated on a category of should-be-impossible structures called “quasicrystals.”

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“My friends and family were always asking, ‘What do you do in the lab? Why are you staying there until 10 p.m.?’” Berns says. “It was hard to explain without using the words I would use to talk to my colleagues, so I started thinking about making it easier to talk to somebody who does not have the same background.”

Berns liked drawing and using “normal, English-language words,” and so about a year before graduation, she opted to accompany her traditional Ph.D. thesis with a comic book version.

Crystals are organized, repetitive structures built from multiple small groups of atoms that are locked into an identical structure. One of the best known is table salt, a cubic structure built of sodium and chlorine atoms.

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