Pittcon Announces Sanford Asher, Chemistry Professor at the University of Pittsburgh, as Recipient of the 2016 Pittsburgh Analytical Chemistry Award

For more information, contact Marian Nardozzi, nardozzi@pittcon.org, 800-825-3221 x 203

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Pittsburgh, PA – September 1, 2015 – Pittcon and its sponsoring society, The Society for Analytical Chemists of Pittsburgh (SACP) are pleased to announce Sanford Asher as the recipient of the 2016 SACP Award.

Asher will accept this prestigious award at Pittcon 2016 which takes place March 6-10, in Atlanta, Georgia. His session, “Photonic Crystal Hydrogel and Organogel Sensors for Chemical and Biological Analytes,” will include a discussion of sensing motifs that utilize 2-D and 3-D arrays and monolayers of particles embedded onto a molecular recognition polymer hydrogel networks.

The SACP Analytical Chemistry Award, established in 1957, is presented annually to recognize outstanding contributions to the field of analytical chemistry by the introduction of a significant technique, theory, instrument or by providing exceptional training for analytical chemists. Asher’s research focuses on the development of novel optical materials in the broad areas of chemical detection and the development of spectroscopy for molecular identification and structural determination. His group pioneered the development of photonic crystals for optical devices and for photonic crystal sensors and deep UV resonance spectroscopy. He developed methods to determine the first structural stages in protein folding and is developing instrumentation and methods for the standoff detection of explosives. He is involved in work to send a deep UV Raman instrument on the 2020 Mars Lander to search for evidence of life.

Asher received his BA in chemistry from the University of Missouri, St. Louis in 1971 and received his Ph.D. in biophysical chemistry from the Unviersity of California, Berkeley in 1977. He was a Postdoctoral Fellow at Harvard in Applied Physics between 1977 and 1980. He joined the faculty in chemistry at the University of Pittsburgh in 1980. Sandy is now Distinguished Professor of Chemistry at the University of Pittsburgh. He has published almost 300 journal papers, has been named as an inventor on 28 patents in the field of photonic crystals and optical instrumentation.


About Pittcon
Pittcon® is a registered trademark of The Pittsburgh Conference on Analytical Chemistry and Applied Spectroscopy, a Pennsylvania non-profit organization. Co-sponsored by the Spectroscopy Society of Pittsburgh and the Society for Analytical Chemists of Pittsburgh, Pittcon is the premier annual conference and exposition on laboratory science.

Proceeds from Pittcon fund science education and outreach at all levels, kindergarten through adult. Pittcon donates more than a million dollars a year to provide financial and administrative support for various science outreach activities including science equipment grants, research grants, scholarships and internships for students, awards to teachers and professors, and grants to public science centers, libraries and museums.