DOI:
10.1039/B926106K
(Editorial)
Anal. Methods, 2010,
2, 14-16
Editorial Board profiles
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| Plate1 Brett Paull | |
Brett Paull is Head of the School of Chemical Sciences at Dublin City University, Ireland. His research interests are based within the fields of analytical, bioanalytical and environmental chemistry, particularly fundamental (new materials and detection techniques) and applied aspects of ion chromatography (IC), capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE) and coupled techniques such as liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry.
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| Plate2 Susan M. Lunte | |
Susan M. Lunte is the Ralph N. Adams Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and Pharmaceutical Chemistry at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS. She received a B.S. degree in chemistry from Kalamazoo College, Kalamazoo, MI, in 1980, and a Ph.D. in Analytical Chemistry in 1984 from Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN. She was a research scientist at Bioanalytical Systems, West Lafayette, IN (1984) and Procter & Gamble, Cincinnati, OH (1984–1987) before coming to the University of Kansas. Dr Lunte began her academic career at the Center for Bioanalytical Research (CBAR) in 1987 as a non-tenure track scientist. She was appointed its Associate Director in 1993 and was Director from 1994 to 1997. In 1995, Dr Lunte joined the Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry as an Associate Professor and was promoted to Professor in 2000. In 2006, she was named the Ralph N. Adams Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and Pharmaceutical Chemistry. Dr Lunte has been the recipient of a NSF CAREER Award; the Agnes Fay Morgan Research Award, and the University of Kansas Graduate Student Mentoring Award. In 2002 she was recognized by the undergraduate students as a Center for Teaching Excellence Outstanding Teacher at KU and named an American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy Teacher of the Year. She is a fellow of the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists. In 2004, Dr Lunte was the recipient of the AAPS Research Achievement Award in Analysis and Pharmaceutical Quality, and in 2007 received the AAPS Analysis and Pharmaceutical Quality (APQ) Outstanding Manuscript Award. She has been an associate editor of Pharm. Sci. and has served on a number of editorial boards including Pharmaceutical Research, Analytical Chemistry, Electrophoresis and the Analyst. Her research interests include new methodologies for separation and detection of peptides, amino acids, neurotransmitters and pharmaceuticals in biological fluids.
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| Plate3 Antonio Molina-Díaz | |
Antonio Molina-Díaz received his B.Sc. in 1975 and Ph.D. degree in chemistry from the University of Granada (Spain) in 1982. He was appointed as Associate Professor (1985) and Professor (2003) at University of Jaén (Spain). His current research interests include the study of new sample treatment/extraction methodologies for the determination of pesticides and other contaminants in foodstuffs by chromatographic techniques hyphenated with mass spectrometry, the development of automated methods based on flow analysis using multicommutation and solid-phase spectroscopic detection (flow-through optosensors), the characterization and evaluation of the performance of advanced wastewater treatment technologies for sustainable water reuse, and the application of methodologies based on LC–TOFMS for forensics/toxicology/doping control applications. He is (co)-author of over 160 publications in peer reviewed international journals, 15 book chapters and holds a patent. He has supervised 15 Ph.D. theses and is the head of the Analytical Chemistry Research Group at the University of Jaén.
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| Plate4 Xiu-Ping Yan | |
Xiu-Ping Yan is Distinguished Professor of “Chang Jiang Scholars Program”, Nankai University, China. He received a M.S. in analytical chemistry at the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Academy of Sciences of China (1987), and a Ph.D. in environmental chemistry at the Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Academy of Sciences of China (1993). He held post-doctoral positions in the Department of Chemistry at Peking University, China (1993–1994), in the Department of Applied Research at Bodenseewerk Perkin-Elmer GmbH, Germany (1995), in the Micro- and Trace Analysis Center at the University of Antwerp (UIA), Belgium (1996), and in the Department of Geological Sciences at the University of Saskatchewan, Canada (1997–1999). He was awarded the NSFC National Distinguished Young Scholars Foundation (2000), and CCS Shu-Quan Liang Prize for Fundamental Research in Analytical Chemistry (2006). He is the author or co-author of about 130 publications in international journals and eight patents. He is an editorial (advisory) board member of Talanta, Analytica Chimica Acta, Cancer Nanotechnology, Atomic Spectrometry Updates, The Open Spectroscopy Journal, Chinese Journal of Analytical Chemistry (in Chinese), Environmental Chemistry (in Chinese), Spectroscopy and Spectral Analysis (in Chinese), Journal of Instrumental Analysis (in Chinese), Journal of Analytical Science (in Chinese), Chinese Journal of Applied Chemistry (in Chinese). His research interests include analytical atomic (mass) spectrometry and its combination with flow injection and chromatography/capillary electrophoresis, green methodologies for sample pretreatment, and advanced functional materials for environmental analysis and bioanalysis.
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| Plate5 Melissa Hanna-Brown | |
Melissa Hanna-Brown is an Associate Research Fellow within the Analytical R&D function of Pharmaceutical Sciences at Pfizer Global R&D Labs in Sandwich, Kent UK. Melissa's research interests are in separation science technology development, chromatographic and electrophoretic method development strategies, high resolution and chemometric approaches for pharmaceuticals or complex biofluid profiling (especially metabolomics) and predictive modelling of separations. She is currently involved in the EFPIA cross-industry topic team on Quality by Design for analytical methods representing Pfizer. Her research experience also spans across the application of separation (chromatographic and electrophoretic) technologies as models for rapid prediction of drug–biomembrane partitioning. Melissa's previous position was Senior Lecturer in Separation Science at King's College London. Her Ph.D. studies were carried out between King's College London and SmithKline Beecham on prediction of drug–biomembrane partitioning. Her postdoctoral research involved developing novel triple-column electrophoretic technology allowing sensitive detection of trace components in complex matrices via 2D-CE for which she won the Desty Memorial Prize for Contribution to Separation Science in 2000. Melissa has been an invited presenter at over 50 national and international conferences since the start of her Ph.D. studies. Melissa is also editor for the Bioanalysis journal. Melissa has served as the Vice President on the RSC Analytical Division Council recently and now has joint chairs on this council and the Industry and Technology Forum. She is also a long-serving member of the RSC Separation Sciences Executive Committee.
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| Plate6 Shoji Motomizu | |
Shoji Motomizu received his B.Sc. degree in 1966 and M.Sc. degree in 1968 in analytical chemistry from Okayama University in Japan. His D.Sc. in analytical chemistry was awarded in 1973 from Kyoto University in Japan. In 1968, he started his study on analytical chemistry at Okayama University as a research associate, and later he was promoted to a Professor of Analytical Chemistry of Okayama University in 1992. He was currently a Professor of Specialty in Research of Okayama University and of Aichi Institute of Technology. He was a chairman of JAFIA (the Japanese Association for Flow Injection Analysis) in 1994–2005, and was the Editor-in-Chief of JSAC (Japan Society for Analytical Chemistry) journals, Bunseki Kagaku in 2003–2006. Now he is a Titular Member of Analytical Chemistry Division, IUPAC. He has received several awards for his contribution to analytical chemistry. Some of them are: JSAC Award for Young Scientist in 1973, The 37th Award for Excellent Paper in Fat/Oil Techniques in 1994, Warsaw University Award in 2000, and JSAC Award for “Development of Separation/Detection System Based on Ion Association Concept” in 2001. Also he was awarded JAFIA Best Paper Award in 2002 and 2005, and JAFIA Scientific Award in 2005. His research is focused on: (1) development of new organic reagents for the separation and the detection of trace analytes, especially ion association and chelating reagents and ion exchanger resins; (2) flow-based analysis (FIA/SIA, HPLC, IC and CE), especially computer-controlled flow-based analysis systems; and (3) new instrumentation for ultratrace analysis. He is the author and co-author of more than 360 original papers published in international journals, and of more than 40 books/chapters in analytical chemistry.
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| Plate7 Jentaie Shiea | |
Jentaie Shiea received his bachelor degree in chemistry from National Chung-Hsing University, Taiwan in 1981. He received M.S. (1988) and Ph.D. (1991) degrees from Montana State University. His thesis studies focus on organic geochemistry and analytical/physical chemistry. After post-doctoral fellowship at Pennsylvania State University (Department of Material Science), he joined National Sun Yat-Sen University (NSYSU, Kaohsiung, Taiwan) faculty. He is now a professor of Department of Chemistry (Analytical Division) at NSYSU and also the Deputy Dean of College of Science. He authored or co-authored more than 200 scientific publications and presentations at internationally scientific meetings. In the last decade, he has devoted himself to promoting mass spectrometric research in Taiwan and Asia. Currently, he is the president of Taiwan Society for Mass Spectrometry (TSMS) and the executive board member and the representative of Region B (Asia and Oceania) of the International Mass Spectrometry Foundation (IMSF). His research interests have long involved biological and organic mass spectrometry, instrumentation, separation, proteomics, and polymer science. Current research work in his laboratory focuses on four main aspects: (1) developing ionization techniques for ambient mass spectrometry; (2) interfacing mass spectrometry with nano-HPLC, GC, CE, and TLC; (3) searching disease biomarkers in the biological fluids; and (4) using mass spectrometry as a tool to rapidly diagnose diseases. Professor Shiea received The Graduate Achievement Award for Outstanding Performance for his Master's Thesis of Montana State University in 1988. So far he has received several awards from National Science Council, Taiwan and NSYSU for his excellent research in mass spectrometry. He has also been honored by NSYSU with its Awards for Teaching Excellence of College of Science (2001) and Excellent Invention (2007). He is also the board member of several government and university committees in controlled drugs, public health and engineering and patent evaluation.
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| Plate8 Miguel Valcarcel | |
Miguel Valcarcel is a full Professor of Analytical Chemistry at the University of Córdoba (Spain) since 1976. He is the author and co-author of 750 scientific articles, seven monographs, eight textbooks and 16 book chapters. He has been the director of 25 Spanish and 14 international scientific projects, as well as having 12 contracts with private firms and acting as a promoter of a spin-off devoted to nanotechnology. He has been the co-supervisor of 66 doctoral theses and an invited lecturer in 70 international meetings. He is the recipient of scientific national (e.g. Award in Chemistry in Spain, 2006) and international (e.g. Robert Boyle Medal of RSC, 2004) prizes.
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