This year, Pittcon recognized excellence in spectroscopy with three awards, the Pittsburgh Spectroscopy Award, the Coblentz Society’s Bomem-Michelson Award, and the Coblentz Society’s Williams-Wright Award. The awards were presented on Monday and Tuesday at the conference.
The Pittsburgh Spectroscopy Award was given to Alfred G. Redfield, a professor emeritus of Biochemistry and Physics, Emeritus at Brandeis University (Waltham, Massachusetts), a member of the National Academy of Sciences, and a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Redfield has received numerous awards, including the Biophysics Prize, American Physical Society, Max Delbruck Prize in Biological Physics, and the Russell Varia Lecture and Prize. During his career, spanning more than 60 years, he has published more than 200 papers. The award committee selected Redfield based on his many accomplishments in the advanced understanding, practical developments, and applications in the field of nuclear magnetic resonance especially in nuclear-spin relaxation, as well as his leadership role in the scientific community and mentorship of young scientists.
David Jonas, a professor at the University of Colorado (Boulder, Colorado), received the Coblentz Society’s Bomem-Michelson Award. Jonas is internationally recognized for his pioneering work in phase-resolved nonlinear optics, and his exploitation of that work to demonstrate femtosecond two-dimensional Fourier transform (2D FT) spectroscopy. This optical analog of 2D NMR is becoming widely used in electronic and vibrational spectroscopy.
Jagdeesh Bandekar was honored with the Coblentz Society’s Williams-Wright Award. Bandekar works as a technical development leader in the Adhesives Bonding Group at Dow Automotive Systems (Auburn Hills, Michigan). His industrial experience in three companies includes chemicals, polymers, bulk and specialty gases, and thin films. He has been involved in research and development, new product development, and evaluating and implementing emerging technologies. Bandekar also has taught and carried out research at universities.
Best of the Week: National Space Day, Battery Analysis
May 2nd 2025Top articles published this week include interviews from our National Space Day content series, a news story about satellite-based spectroscopy, and an interview about battery analysis conducted at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.
Using Spectroscopy to Measure Geochemical Transformations of Gypsum for Ca-Sulfate Detection on Mars
May 2nd 2025Research was conducted exploring the dehydration pathways of gypsum (CaSO₄·2H₂O) and its interactions with chloride (Cl) salts under a range of thermal and environmental conditions relevant to Earth and Mars.Spectroscopy spoke to Merve Yeşilbaş, corresponding author of a paper based on this work (1), about the research.
The Role of LIBS in ChemCam and SuperCam: An Interview with Kelsey Williams, Part III
May 2nd 2025In this extended Q&A interview, we sit down with Kelsey Williams, a postdoctoral researcher at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), who is working on planetary instrumentation using spectroscopic techniques such as laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) and laser ablation molecular isotopic spectrometry (LAMIS). In Part III, Williams goes into detail about ChemCam and SuperCam and how LIBS is used in both these instruments.