Deuterium

Penn State physicist Ferdinand Brickwedde in 1931 produced the world's first measurable amount of deuterium, a hydrogen isotope found in "heavy water," used in nuclear and biological research. Earlier, Brickwedde had been co-discoverer, with Harold Urey and George Murphy of Columbia University, of deuterium. Urey was awarded the 1934 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the discovery.