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February 1, 2010 - Volume 88, Number 5
- pp. 39-40
Awards
More Awards
- ACS Award For Achievement In Research For The Teaching & Learning Of Chemistry
- ACS Award In Chromatography
- Francis P. Garvan-John M. Olin Medal
- James Bryant Conant Award In High School Chemistry Teaching
- Gabor A. Somorjai Award For Creative Research In Catalysis
- George A. Olah Award In Hydrocarbon Or Petroleum Chemistry
- Award for Volunteer Service to the American Chemical Society
- F. Albert Cotton Award in Synthetic Inorganic Chemistry
- ACS Award in Polymer Chemistry
- Elias J. Corey Award for Outstanding Original Contribution in Organic Synthesis by a Young Investigator
- ACS Award in Separations Science & Technology
- Nobel Laureate Signature Award for Graduate Education in Chemistry
- Alfred Bader Award in Bioinorganic or Bioorganic Chemistry
- ACS Award in Analytical Chemistry
- ACS Award for Distinguished Service in the Advancement of Inorganic Chemistry
- Irving Langmuir Award in Chemical Physics
- ACS Award in Industrial Chemistry
- E. Bright Wilson Award in Spectroscopy
- George C. Pimentel Award In Chemical Education
- ACS Award for Chemistry of Materials
- E. V. Murphree Award in Industrial & Engineering Chemistry
- Arthur W. Adamson Award for Distinguished Service in the Advancement of Surface Chemistry
- ACS Award In Pure Chemistry
- Earle B. Barnes Award For Leadership In Chemical Research Management
- ACS Award In Organometallic Chemistry
- ACS Award For Creative Advances In Environmental Science & Technology
- James T. Grady-James H. Stack Award For Interpreting Chemistry For The Public
- Alfred Burger Award In Medicinal Chemistry
- ACS Award For Creative Invention
- ACS Award For Research At An Undergraduate Institution
- James Flack Norris Award In Physical Organic Chemistry
- Frank H. Field & Joe L. Franklin Award For Outstanding Achievement In Mass Spectrometry
- Ernest Guenther Award In The Chemistry Of Natural Products
- ACS Award For Affordable Green Chemistry
- ACS Award In Inorganic Chemistry
- ACS Award For Computers In Chemical & Pharmaceutical Research
- National Fresenius Award
- Herbert C. Brown Award For Creative Research In Synthetic Methods
Courtesy of Udo Brinkman
Udo A. Th. Brinkman became actively involved in optimizing liquid chromatography so he could help reveal what chemicals were polluting rivers throughout Europe, particularly in the Rhine River Basin, more than 30 years ago. That early work eventually led to the development of hyphenated systems that combine sample preparation (such as solid-phase extraction), analysis, and detection in one instrument.
Today, Brinkman, 74, an emeritus professor at the Free University of Amsterdam, is being honored for developing instrumentation and fully automated methods that are widely used in environmental, food, and biomedical applications.
Brinkman is “a world leader in chromatography,” says Patrick J. F. Sandra, a professor of organic chemistry and director of the Pfizer Analytical Research Center at Ghent University, in Belgium. Brinkman has been active in all fields of chromatography, but he is best known for advancing on-line sample preparation strategies and comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography (GC×GC).
In recent years, Brinkman has combined comprehensive GC×GC with time-of-flight MS, rapid-scanning quadrupole MS, and microscale electron capture detection. He finds the technique “intriguing and highly rewarding” and has published dozens of papers and several reviews on the topic.
Peter J. Schoenmakers, a chemistry professor at the University of Amsterdam, calls Brinkman “instrumental in raising the level of chromatography to its current high standards.” Schoenmakers says he and many others have been inspired by Brinkman. “He emphasized the importance of working on real problems, dealing with real sample matrices, and producing reliable results.”
Brinkman was “extremely effective in bridging the gap between new technology and analytical practice,” Schoenmakers adds. “He was often the driving force behind the implementation and utilization of the latest developments in industrial and institutional laboratories.”
A prolific author, Brinkman has published more than 700 scientific papers. He has organized several chromatography conferences and has served as editor of the Journal of Chromatography A since 1993.
Winning the ACS award is important, Brinkman says, because it shows that people recognize the high quality of his work over the past three decades. But he emphasizes that it was not just his work, but also that of his students and collaborators.
Officially retired, but still publishing chromatography papers, Brinkman lives with his wife, Jacqueline, and four dogs “in a beautiful part of the province of Zeeland, close to the North Sea beach” in the Netherlands. In his free time, he can be found gardening and reading history books, “with a special appreciation for the accomplished narrative style of so many British authors.” He also enjoys time with his three daughters and three grandchildren.
Brinkman will present the award address before the Division of Analytical Chemistry at the fall ACS national meeting in Boston.
- Chemical & Engineering News
- ISSN 0009-2347
- Copyright © 2011 American Chemical Society
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