41st Annual Summer Symposium on Analytical Chemistry - Analytical

May 30, 2012 - 41st Annual Summer Symposium on Analytical Chemistry. Anal. Chem. , 1988, 60 (8), pp 515A–517A. DOI: 10.1021/ac00159a726. Publication...
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MEETINGS

41st Annual Summer Symposium on Analytical Chemistry "Lasers in Analytical Chemistry" is the subject of the 1988 Summer Symposium of the ACS Division of Analytical Chemistry. The symposium will be held June 26-29 at Stanford University in Stanford, Calif. The general chairman is Richard N. Zare of Stanford. Co-chairmen are Fred E. Lytle of Purdue University and Edward S. Yeung of Iowa State University. The symposium is sponsored by the ACS Division

LASERS

of Analytical Chemistry, A N A L Y T I C A L C H E M I S T R Y , and the Industrial Affili-

Travel

ates Program of the Departments of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering at Stanford University. Stanford University Stanford University, founded in 1891, has a total student enrollment of 12,000. The Department of Chemistry includes 19 faculty members, 966 undergraduate students, 214 graduate students, and 103 postdoctoral fellows and visiting scholars. The department occupies five buildings, including one completed in 1986 to foster interaction between the Departments of Chemistry, Biology, and Chemical Engineering. The symposium will be held in the Carl F Braun Auditorium of the Seeley G. Mudd Chemistry Building. Housing Conferees will be housed in Florence Moore Hall, a student residence that is a 10-minute walk from Braun Auditorium. The package rates of $193.50 for single occupancy and $168/person for double occupancy include housing for three nights, daily maid service, and all meals beginning with breakfast on Monday and concluding with lunch on Wednesday (with the exception of the Tuesday evening banquet, which is covered in the registration fee). Children 10 years of age and under may stay for half price. Dormitory accommodations will be available in Stern Hall for students attending the symposium. The student package, which includes three nights' housing but does not include meals,

Commodore Hornblower. The $200 registration fee includes admission to all technical sessions, symposium materials, the reception and poster session on Sunday evening, coffee breaks, a symposium T-shirt, and the Tuesday evening banquet. The student registration fee of $50 includes all of the above except the banquet. Students and guests may order banquet tickets on the registration form.

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in Analytical Chemistry costs $76.50 for single occupancy and $57/person for double occupancy. Registration and special activities Symposium registration will take place on Sunday, June 26, from 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. during the welcoming reception and poster session at the Holiday Inn of Palo Alto, 625 El Camino Real. (Authors who wish to participate in the poster session should submit a title along with their registration form by May 15 to Richard Zare, Department of Chemistry, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif. 94305.) Registration will continue at 7:45 a.m. on Monday, June 27, in the Seeley G. Mudd Chemistry Building. The symposium banquet, which will be held on Tuesday, June 28, will be a dinner cruise on the yacht

Stanford University is adjacent to Palo Alto and is located 35 miles south of San Francisco, midway between the San Francisco and San Jose Airports. Conferees may reserve private or shared-ride limousine service by calling Airport Connection (1-800-AIRPORT). General parking on the Stanford campus is extremely limited. However, free parking will be available at Florence Moore Hall for participants housed there; free parking will also be arranged for nonresident participants. Family activities Symposium participants and their families may take advantage of the campus recreational facilities, including tennis, squash, and volleyball courts. Use of the swimming pools and golf course requires payment of guest fees. Other campus activities include concerts, films, plays, lectures, and exhibits. Places to visit include the Stanford Shopping Center, Town and Country Village, and Palo Alto's many restaurants, bookstores, and specialty shops. Stanford is less than an hour away from the coast and is two hours from the Monterey-Carmel peninsula. For further information about the symposium, contact Richard Zare (address above; 415-723-3062) or Lindi Bauman, Industrial Affiliates Program, Departments of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif. 94305 (415723-0153).

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, VOL. 60, NO. 8, APRIL 15, 1988 · 515 A

MEETINGS Symposium format The symposium is divided into five half-day sessions dealing with nonlin­ ear spectroscopy, the condensed phase, surfaces, atoms and small molecules, and large molecules. In addition, two sessions are being organized on medical applications and on commercialization of instrumentation. The complete pro­ gram for the symposium follows.

Program MONDAY MORNING Nonlinear Spectroscopy 8:15 8:30 9:00

Stanford University with Lake Lagunita in the foreground

Welcoming Remarks. F. E. Lytle, E. S. Yeung, R. N. Zare High-Resolution Nonlinear Spectrosco­ py. J. Wright, U of Wisconsin Analytical Laser Spectroscopy at High Resolution: New Techniques. J. M. Ram­ sey, Oak Ridge National Laboratories

Registration Form

41st Annual Summer Symposium on Analytical Chemistry June 26-29, 1988 Stanford University, Stanford, Calif.

Housing D Please reserve campus housing package (June 26-29) as follows: Π Florence Moore Hall, single room ($193.50) D Florence Moore Hall, double room ($168/person)

Name (Mr./Ms.)

D My roommate will be

Title

G Assign me a roommate

Institution

(D smoking or

Π Student, single room, Stern Hall ($76.50)

Address City

State

Phone J

G nonsmoking roommate)

!

D Student, double room, Stern Hall ($57/person)

Zip

Π My roommate will be G Assign me a roommate (Q smoking or D nonsmoking roommate)

T-shirt size (S, M, L, XL)

D I will arrange my own housing; send motel list.

Registration Fees Registration, $200

Banquet entree choice:

$

Π Chicken Oriental G Mahi Mahi

Student registration, $50 Total for housing

^ _ _ _ _

Banquet tickets, $50 (Guests and students) TOTAL ENCLOSED

$

Return this form by May 15, with a check payable to Stanford University for the total amount due, to: Lindi Bauman, Industrial Affiliates Program, Departments of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif. 94305.

516 A · ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, VOL. 60, NO. 8, APRIL 15, 1988

MEETINGS

Richard Ν, Zare General chairman

9:30 10:30 11:00 11:30

Fred E. Lytle Program co-chairman

Picosecond Rotational Diffusion Studies of Solvation in Micellar Media. M. J. Wirth, U of Delaware Combining Optical Fibers and Nonlinear Spectroscopy into a Remote Sensing Methodology. F. Ε Lytle, Purdue U Doppler-Free Analytical Spectroscopy by Nonlinear Optical Phase Conjugation. W. G. Tong, San Diego State U CW Lasers in Analytical Chemistry. T. J. Whitaker, Pacific Northwest Laboratory

11:00 11:30

Edward S. Yeung Program co-chairman

Second Harmonic Generation Studies of Chemisorption at Metal Electrode Sur­ faces. R. M. Corn, U of Wisconsin Measurements of the Structure and Dy­ namics of Film Growth on Metal Elec­ trode Surfaces by Second Harmonic Generation. G. L. Richmond, U of Oregon

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Atoms and Small Molecules 1:30 MONDAY AFTERNOON The Condensed Phase 2:00 2:30

3:00 4:00 4:30 5:00

Time-Resolved Photothermal Spectros­ copy. J. Harris, U of Utah Signal-to-Noise Considerations in Ther­ mal Lens Spectroscopy and Its Influence on Experimental Design. D. R. Bobbitt, U of Arkansas Attomole Amino Acid Analysis Using Capillary Separation and Laser Detec­ tion. N. J. Dovichi, U of Alberta Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectrosco­ py of Neurotransmitters. M. Morris, U of Michigan Analytical and Bioanalytical Applica­ tions of UV Resonance Raman Spec­ troscopy. S. Asher, U of Pittsburgh Characterization at the Femtomole Lev­ el of Metabolites Bound to DNA: Fluo­ rescence Line-Narrowing-Hole-Burning Spectroscopy. G. Small, Iowa State U

2:00

2:30 3:20

3:50 4:20

Surface Studies Using Ion Beams and Lasers. N. Winograd, Pennsylvania State U Developing the Ultimate Analytical Po­ tential of Resonance Ionization Mass Spectrometry. J. C. Travis, National Bureau of Standards Spectroscopic Probes for Transient Spe­ cies: Applications to Laser-Generated Plumes. E. S. Yeung, Iowa State U Isotope Ratio Measurements with the Potential of 1:10" Using Isotope Selec­ tive Photoionization, Magnetic Disper­ sion, and Photon Burst Detection. R. A. Keller. Los Alamos National Laboratory Analytical Applications of UV-LaserProduced Microplasmas. A W. Miziolek, U. S. Army Ballistic Research Laboratory Resonance Ionization Studies of Laser Ablation. N. S. Nogar, Los Alamos Na­ tional Laboratory

WEDNESDAY MORNING Large Molecules

TUESDAY MORNING Surfaces 8:30 9:00 9:30

10:30

Picosecond and Submicron Surface Laser Spectroscopy. R. P. Van Duyne, Northwestern U Optical Waveguides and Spectroscopy: Thin Films from 10 Â to 10 μιη. P. W. Bonn, U of Illinois Quantitative Impurity Spectroscopy in III—V Semiconductors: Near-Infrared Ra­ man Scattering Below One Part Per Bil­ lion. T. Harris, AT&T Bell Laboratories Lasers as Probes and Prods of Electro­ chemical Events: The Unusual Case of the Carbon/Solution Interface. R. L. McCreery, Ohio State U

8:30 9:00 9:30 10:30

11:00 11:30 12:00

Capillary Zone Electrophoresis. R. N. Zare, Stanford U Selective Excitation in Vapor-Phase An­ alytical Spectroscopy. M. Johnston, U of Colorado Fragmentation-Fluorescence Spectrom­ etry of Nonfluorescent Molecules. E. L. Wehry, U of Tennessee Spectroscopy of Small Biological Mole­ cules Using Resonant Two-Photon Ion­ ization in Supersonic Jet Expansions. D. M. Lubman. U of Michigan Analytical Approach for Assignment of Chemical Species in Supersonic Jet Spectrometry. T. Imasaka, Kyushu U Closing Remarks. F. E. Lytle, E. S. Yeung, R. N. Zare Symposium ends

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ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, VOL. 60, NO. 8, APRIL 15, 1988 · 517 A