Coblentz Award Nominations - Analytical Chemistry (ACS Publications)

May 30, 2012 - Coblentz Award Nominations. Anal. Chem. , 1990, 62 (9), pp 527A–527A. DOI: 10.1021/ac00208a711. Publication Date: May 1990...
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Coblentz Award Nominations Nominations are sought for the 1991 Coblentz Award, which is presented annually to an outstanding spectroscopist under age 36. T h e award carries a $1000 prize and a travel allowance. Nominations, which should include a description of accomplishments, a curriculum vitae, and supporting letters, should be sent to Keith Nelson, Departm e n t of Chemistry, Massachusetts I n s t i t u t e of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139 (617-253-1423). Deadline is July 1.

Division of Analytical Chemistry Awards Paul B o u m a n s , Alan Marshall, Royce Murray, and Dennis Peters are this year's winners of the ACS Division of Analytical Chemistry a n n u a l awards. T h e honorées will receive their awards at the fall 1990 ACS national meeting in Washington, DC. Brief biographical sketches of the awardees follow. P a u l B o u m a n s , chief scientist a t Philips Research Laboratories (Eindhoven, T h e Netherlands), will receive the Award in Spectrochemical Analysis sponsored by Per kin-Elmer. Boumans studied physics and chemistry at the University of Amsterdam and received his Ph.D. in 1961. He was a member of the university staff before joining Philips as a research scientist in 1968. Since 1972 he has served as an editor for Spectrochimica Acta Β and was appointed Editorin-Chief in 1979. Although completely deaf for the past 15 years, Boumans is very active in the development and advancement of emission spectroscopy methodology. He has studied dis­ charge characteristics, source optimization, detection pow­ er, selectivity, spectral interferences, line selection, highresolution spectroscopy, and spectral simulation. He is also the author of a classic book on fundamentals of plasmas, a two-volume wavelength table, a n d a two-volume work on I C P emission spectroscopy. Alan Marshall, the recipient of t h e Award in Chemical Instrumentation (sponsored by Dow Chemical Co.), re­ ceived a B.A. degree in chemistry from Northwestern University (1965) and a Ph.D. in physical chemistry from Stan­ ford University (1970). In 1969 Mar­ shall joined the faculty a t the Univer­ sity of British Columbia, and in 1980 he moved to the Ohio State Universi­ ty to serve as professor of chemistry a n d biochemistry as well as director of the campus Chemical I n s t r u m e n t Center. Over t h e years, his research interests have shifted from N M R spectroscopy to M S . He is best known for his devel­ opment (with M. B. Comisarow) of Fourier transform ion

cyclotron resonance M S , for which he won t h e 1988 ACS Akron Section Award and t h e 1988 OSU Distinguished Scholar Award. In 1989 he was elected a fellow of b o t h the American Physical Society a n d t h e American Association for the Advancement of Science. Marshall serves on t h e Advisory Board of A N A L Y T I C A L C H E M I S T R Y and is the N o r t h American Editor of Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry. R o y c e M u r r a y of the University of N o r t h Carolina, Chapel Hill, will re­ ceive the Award in Electrochemistry (sponsored by the Electrochemical In­ s t r u m e n t s Division of E G & G Prince­ ton Applied Research). M u r r a y received a B.S. degree from Birmingham S o u t h e r n College (1957) a n d a P h . D . in analytical chemistry from Northwestern University (1960) before joining t h e faculty at N o r t h Carolina. In 1980 he was appointed K e n a n Professor. His research interests include electroanalytical methods, molecular design of electrode surfaces, electrochemically reactive polymers, mass and electron t r a n s p o r t in thin films, electrocatalysis, macromolecular electronics and polymer film microstructures, solid-state voltammetry, and electrochemistry a t superconducting electrodes. M u r r a y has received n u m e r o u s accolades, including Sloan and Guggenheim fellowships, t h e 1987 N o r t h Caroli­ n a Distinguished Chemistry Award, the 1987 Carl Wagner Memorial Award, t h e 1988 Charles N . Reilley Award, and t h e 1989 Electrochemistry G r o u p Medal. D e n n i s P e t e r s will be honored as t h e recipient of the Award for Excellence in Teaching (cosponsored by t h e Divi­ sion a n d E. I. du P o n t de N e m o u r s & Co.). P e t e r s , H e r m a n T. Briscoe professor of chemistry at Indiana University, is also an associate chairman of t h e de­ p a r t m e n t , where he is responsible for chemical education. His research in­ terests lie in t h e field of electroanalytical chemistry, partic­ ularly mechanistic and synthetic organic electrochemistry. Peters's recent work has centered on the reduction of or­ ganic halides, t h e intramolecular reductive cyclization of acetylenic halides, the electrolytic interconversion of al­ iènes and alkynes, the electrochemistry of acyl halides and their derivatives, and t h e role of proton donors during the electrolysis of u n s a t u r a t e d hydrocarbons. Peters received a B.S. degree from t h e California Instit u t e of Technology (1958) and a P h . D . from H a r v a r d University (1962). H e has coauthored five u n d e r g r a d u a t e textbooks on analytical chemistry a n d is the recipient of two teaching awards from I n d i a n a University: t h e 1969 Ulysses G. Weatherly Award and the 1984 Distinguished Teaching Award in N a t u r a l a n d M a t h e m a t i c a l Sciences, as well as the 1988 Chemical Manufacturers Association National Catalyst Award for outstanding contributions to teaching. ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, VOL. 62, NO. 9, MAY 1, 1990 · 527 A