The most popular JAAS articles in October
Read five of the most-read papers in October 2010 here:
DOI: 10.1039/B511542F
DOI: 10.1039/B314153P
DOI: 10.1039/B927292P
DOI: 10.1039/C0JA00055H
The most popular JAAS articles in October
Read five of the most-read papers in October 2010 here:
Professor Benli Huang and Professor Zheming Ni were both named recipients of the 2010 Asia-Pacific Winter Plasma Conference Award for their long history of work in atomic spectroscopy. Professor Huang is also the honorary chairman of the conference, and was on-hand to receive the award while Professor Ni was unable to attend, but sent her regrets via Professor Yang. These two excellent analytical chemists represent a long history of great work in atomic spectroscopy, and this honor is well deserved!
The 4th Asia-Pacific Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry started yesterday with an excellent program of speakers.
This featured a plenary presentation from JAAS Editorial Board member Gary Hiefjte, on novel mass spectrometers for plasma spectrochemistry.
JAAS are delighted to annouce that the journal will be publishing a themed issue from the conference, and warmly invite all delegates to submit their work as either a Paper or Technical Note.
The submission deadline is 5th January 2011, and articles can be uploaded for submission via the link on the journal homepage. All authors should indicate that their article is to be considered for the APWC 2010 themed issue.
Please contact us if you have any questions on the preparation or submission of your article.
The 2010 APWC is begining this morning in Cheng Du, China (or this evening for those in the states; and way too early/late for those in Europe). Cheng Du is a wonderful city, and among other distinctions is the center of the Panda Bear world! The National Panda Research Center is located just 20 minutes away by taxi, and several of us took the opportunity to visit. As you can see, they are really amazing animals and worth the trip…
The Silver Anniversary of the journal was marked by a special one-day session held in Beijing today!
Over 100 members of the analytical chemistry community from around the world participated in a day of great research and discussion, making the event a great success. The symposium title ‘Highlighting the past, present, and future of atomic spectrometry‘ was indeed the theme, as speakers covered a wide range of topics, from Glow Discharge spectroscopy (myself), to the use of ICP-MS for biological and DNA-based analysis (Prof. Xinrong Zhang), and the use of isotope ratio for a number of elements (C and S included) for forensic and food-science analysis (Dr Rebeca Santamaria Fernandez), new laser ablation strategies for ICP-MS analysis (Prof. Takafumi Hirata), novel applications and instrumentation with continuum-source ETAAS (Prof. Martin Resano), and the role of isotope ratio ICP-MS in a number of unique applications related to the natural environment (Prof. Ashley Townsend).
Manufacturer representatives gave some wonderful technical presentations about the latest instrumentation developments in ICP-MS from Thermo Scientific (Dr Lothar Rothman), ICP-MS from Nu instruments (Dr. John Cantle), ICP-MS from Agilent Technologies (Dr. Steve Wilbur), and the continuum AAS platform from Analytic Jena (Dr. Tai Zhao). The program closed with two interesting presentations: one from Prof. Zhaochu Hu and Prof. Shan Gao that described the recent evolution of analytical chemistry in China over the last 25 years – and another from Dr Niamh O’Connor and Dr Norbert Jakubowski detailing the inner workings and procedures (and philosophy) of manuscript editing at the RSC.
With over 100 participants, the room was full and discussion was stimulated by the promise of a candy for each question posed to the authors! Another great Jakubowski innovation!
Beijing, China: Invited speakers began to arrive in Beijing for the special one-day symposium celebrating the 25 anniversary of JAAS to be held on the campus of Tsinghua University, Beijing, China. Many took advantage of the great weather (and a bit of extra time) to visit the city and see the sights!
Above, the stalward group of Prof. Martin Resano (University of Zaragoza, Spain), Prof. Ashley Townsend (University of Tasmania), Dr. Rebeca Santamaria-Fernandez (Institute of Photonic Sciences, Barcelona, Spain) – along with yours truly – had the chance to visit (and climb) on the Great Wall.
Many Thanks to our kind hosts and JAAS (particularly Prof. Xinrong Zhang, Niamh, and May) for arranging the tour!
Just a quick reminder– The conference registration deadline for the 2011 European Winter Conference in Zaragoza, Spain is November 30. After that date, registration rates increase–so do it ASAP! More information can be found online at:
http://www.winterplasmazaragoza2011.es/registration_info.php
Professor Kay Niemax and coauthors S.Groh, C.C. Garcia, A. Murtazin, and H. Horvatic have been named winners of the 2009 Elsevier/Spectrochemica Atomic Spectroscopy Award in recognition of their paper “Local effects of atomizing analyte droplets on the plasma parameters of the inductively coupled plasma”, Spectrochim. Acta Part B 64 (2009) 247-254.
The award is given by the editorial board of the journal Spectrochimica Acta, Part B in recognition of the most significant manuscript published in the journal in that year.
Congratulations to this talented group of researchers!
Professor Joe Caruso of the University of Cincinnati was recently named a Fellow of the Society of Applied Spectroscopy in recognition of his significant contributions to the field of atomic spectroscopy and his tireless efforts on behalf of the SAS. Prof. Caruso served as chairman of the editorial board of JAAS, and is currently the chairman of the editorial board of the sister-publication Metallomics.
Congratulations Joe!
The 25th anniversary of the journal was marked at the FACSS conference with a celebratory session dedicated to young investigators in atomic spectrometry. It turned out to be one of the highlights of the atomic program at FACSS.
Many thanks to the FACSS conference for hosting the event, and to all the participants for presenting their latest research results-the future is indeed bright!