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Calling all young analytical professionals!

EAP 2011: Analytical Sciences – Divide and Conquer!

This year’s EAP conference (Emerging Analytical Professionals) will be held from 06-08 May, and the general theme of this year’s conference is analytical chemistry in archaeological sciences. The EAP meeting is a unique conference providing excellent networking and professional development opportunities for early analytical career professionals. Other specialist sessions will include separation sciences, knowledge from data and career development.

Venue: The Kettering Park Hotel and Spa, Kettering Parkway, Kettering, NN15 6XT

For more information on how to register for the conference, please visit the EAP 2011 website

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US-China Workshop on Analytical Chemistry – stronger together

Last week I attended a US-China Workshop at Purdue University, US, which brought together some of the brightest minds in analytical science from these two countries, to exchange ideas and provide suggestions for the development of  the subject.

Topics for discussion included how the community can help to raise the profile of publications in analytical science, research trends, infrastructure and instrumentation and the status of analytical post-graduate education.

A major theme was collaboration, and it was recognised that enabling US scientisits to visit and work in China, and vice versa, is incredibly important. There are a huge number of Chinese students looking to carry out post-graduate study in the US and Europe, however this is currently a one-way street.

To support closer ties, it was also recognised that not all the high profile journals have Chinese representation on their Editorial and Advisory Boards. Whilst this an area where the RSC is very proactive (and will aim to continue strengthening our links),  it is hoped that other publishers will also follow suit. This year, Analyst has seen significant growth in the number of papers coming from China. As well as the growth in the subject, is also partly due to the appointment of Professor Xinrong Zhang at Tsinghua University, Beijing as Associate Editor for Asia.

One thing is clear, whilst there is concern that analytical chemistry doesn’t always get the billing it deserves in  the US, this is certainly not the case in China. The growth in investment in analytical departments in China has been exponential over the past few years, and this is something that we are certainly beginning to see reflected in the quantity, and quality, of the  research being done.

With open and informative workshops such as these, it will be fascinating to follow the outcomes and developments of this collaboration. However a big first step has been taken, recognising that by working together, the worlds two superpowers of analytical science can really ensure the future of the subject continues to be exciting.

Read the Analyst themed issue on ‘Highlighting analytical science in China’.

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Analyst Editorial Board Chair wins RSC award

I am delighted to say that Professor Paul Bohn, Arthur J. Schmitt Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry at Notre Dame University, US and Chair of the Analyst Editorial Board has been awarded the 2010 Theophilus Redwood Award. This is in recognition of the breadth and impact of his contribution to analytical science in the areas of microfludic and nanoscale chemical sensing.

Paul joined the Analyst Editorial team in 2007, and served as the Editor for the Americas for three years, before being appointed Chair at the beginning of 2010.

The Theophilus Redwood Award is given to a leading analytical scientist who is also an outstanding communicator, and is awarded by the RSC Analytical Divison. It is sponsored by the Analytical Chemistry Trust Fund.

Read a selection of Paul’s work published in Analyst:

High sensitivity hydrogen sensing with Pt-decorated porous gallium nitride prepared by metal-assisted electroless etching
Barrett K. Duan and Paul W. Bohn
Analyst, 2010, 135, 902-907, http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/B926182F

Enzymatic activity of surface-immobilized horseradish peroxidase confined to micrometer- to nanometer-scale structures in nanocapillary array membranes  Zhen Wang, Travis L. King, Sean P. Branagan and Paul W. Bohn
Analyst, 2009, 134, 851-859, http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/B815590A

Analytical sciences – an endless horizon 
Analyst, 2010, 135, 439-440, http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/C002392M

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Analytical Research Forum 2010

The Analytical Research Forum was held at Loughborough University this year. We were in excellent company, as we were sharing the campus with many young teams from numerous sports on training camps, and in particular the World Rope-Skipping Championships! 

The keynote speakers included Gary Eiceman from New Mexico State University, US who gave a fascinating talk on the possibilites of ion-mobilty mass spectrometry, and some thoughts on what the future holds for this technique. Read one of recent articles in Analyst.

Ion mobility mass spectrometry (IM-MS) became a bit of theme with further discussion from Perdita Barran on the use of nano-electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry and IM-MS for examining biological systems in the gas phase.

Perdita was also presented with the 2009 Joseph Black award for her developments in the field of mass spectrometry, especially ion-mobility techniques, and the application of these techniques to biological macromolecules and their gas phase interactions.

Look out for the Emerging Investigators Issue in Analyst early next year, which Perdita is co-Guest Editing with Christy Haynes.

Fingerprinting and forensics was another popular theme of the conference, with a very impressive keynote from David Russell from the University of East Anglia. He updated delegates on the methods his group have developed to detect drugs and metabolites on fingerprints. The  method of combining magnetic microparticles or gold nanoparticles with antibodies is so powerful, you can expect to see this approach in use in the near future – drug-drivers beware! Read his article on these methods in Analyst.

Brett Paull, Analytical Methods Editor-in-ChiefAnalytical Methods Editor-in-Chief, Brett Paull gave the final keynote talk on the Wednesday morning, on the topic of monolithic materials for separation science. 

Other talks which were also impressive included “Ion mobility-mass spectrometry of 3-D supramolecular architectures” by Martin De Cecco from the University of Edinburgh and “Spatially standardized cell biology” by Jonathan West from ISAS, Dortmund, Germany.

The social and networking side of ARF is however just as important as the science, and there were plenty of opportunities for this too. The quiz held in the bar on the Monday night required a combination of largely musical knowledge with a small amount of chemistry! This was most abely won by Perdita Barran’s group from the University of Edinburgh. The conference dinner was also traditionally held on the Tuesday evening.

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Interview with Justin Gooding

Analyst Editorial Board Member Justin Gooding talks to Bibiana Campos-Seijo about dinosaurs, science funding in Australia and his desire to be a professional sportsman.

Read the interview in full on the Highlights in Chemical Technology website.

Justin Gooding is a chemistry professor at the University of New South Wales, Australia. His current research interests focus on surface modification of nanoparticles and nanoporous photonic crystals with self-assembled monolayers for the development of biointerfaces, biosensors and molecular electronics of application in sensing and cell biology.

Read some of Justin’s recent research published in RSC Journals:

Wet chemical routes to the assembly of organic monolayers on silicon surfaces via the formation of Si–C bonds: surface preparation, passivation and functionalization
Simone Ciampi, Jason B. Harper and J. Justin Gooding
Chem. Soc. Rev., 2010, 39, 2158 – 2183, http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/b923890p

The importance of surface chemistry in mesoporous materials: lessons from porous silicon biosensors
Kristopher A. Kilian, Till Böcking and J. Justin Gooding
Chem. Commun., 2009, 630 – 640, http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/b815449j

Multi-analyte sensing: a chemometrics approach to understanding the merits of electrode arrays versus single electrodes
Diako Ebrahimi, Edith Chow, Justin J. Gooding and David B. Hibbert
Analyst, 2008, 133, 1090 – 1096, http://dx.doi.org/b804811h

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Faraday 149: Analysis for Healthcare Diagnostics and Theranostics

The need in healthcare to detect biomolecular species such as proteins, oligonucleotides (DNA and RNA) and cells for diagnostics is driving the current development of physical techniques.

Themes of this meeting include:
Systems/Devices to Inform Therapy (SDIT) 
Physical Techniques for Diagnostics (PTD)
High-Throughput Measurement and Analysis (HTMA)
Towards Real-time Clinical Measurement (TRCM)

This meeting is being held at the University of Edinburgh from 6-8 September, 2010.

Registration deadline 6th August

For further information about about this meeting and to register, please visit the website.

Faraday Discussion 149 is organised by the Faraday Division in association with the Analytical Division.

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