Ronald D. Macfarlane
Ronald D. Macfarlane | |
---|---|
Born | February 21, 1933[1] Buffalo, New York[1] |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | B.A. 1954 University at Buffalo M.S. 1957 Carnegie-Mellon University Ph.D. 1959 Carnegie-Mellon University |
Known for | Mass Spectrometry |
Awards | Guggenheim Fellow Distinguished Contribution in Mass Spectrometry Award Distinguished Achievement in Research Award ACS Nuclear Chemistry Award |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Chemist |
Institutions | Texas A&M University |
Ronald D. Macfarlane (born February 21, 1933, Buffalo, New York)[1] is distinguished professor of Chemistry at Texas A&M University.[2] In 1991, he received the Inaugural Award of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry's Distinguished Achievement Award.[1]
Early life and education
- 1954 University at Buffalo, New York - B.A. Chemistry[1]
- 1957 Carnegie-Mellon University, Pennsylvania - M.S. Chemistry[1]
- 1959 Carnegie-Mellon University, Pennsylvania - Ph.D. Chemistry[1]
Research interests
- Separations Methods for Medical Diagnosis
- Ultra-Sensitive Mass Spectrometry
- Is researching the new methods of Conceptual Learning
Awards
- Guggenheim Fellowship, 1968
- Distinguished Achievement in Research Award
- ACS Nuclear Chemistry Award
- 1990 ASMS Distinguished Contribution in Mass Spectrometry Award
References
- ^ a b c d e f g Center for Oral History. "Ronald D. Macfarlane". Science History Institute.
- ^ "Macfarlane Research Group". Texas A&M University. Retrieved November 13, 2010.
- v
- t
- e
Recipients of the John B. Fenn Award
- Ronald D. Macfarlane (1990)
- Michael Barber (1991)
- John B. Fenn (1992)
- Christie G. Enke / Richard Yost (1993)
- Donald F. Hunt (1994)
- Keith R. Jennings (1995)
- Frank H. Field / Burnaby Munson (1996)
- Franz Hillenkamp / Michael Karas (1997)
- David A. Dahl / Don C. McGilvery (1998)
- Melvin Comisarow / Alan G. Marshall (1999)
- Boris Aleksandrovich Mamyrin (2000)
- George C. Stafford, Jr. (2001)
- William Henzel / John Stults / Colin Watanabe (2002)
- Fred McLafferty (2003)
- Michael T. Bowers (2004)
- James A. McCloskey (2005)
- R. Graham Cooks (2006)
- Jesse L. Beauchamp (2007)
- Alexander Makarov (2008)
- Simon J. Gaskell / Vicki H. Wysocki (2009)
- Marvin L. Vestal (2010)
- Robert J. Cotter (2011)
- Catherine C. Fenselau (2012)
- Richard D. Smith (2013)
- Richard M. Caprioli (2014)
- Brian T. Chait (2015)
- Scott A. McLuckey (2016)
- Catherine E. Costello (2017)
- Gert von Helden / Martin F. Jarrold / David E. Clemmer (2018)
- John Yates III (2019)
- Michael L. Gross (2020)
- Peter B. Armentrout (2021)
- Evan R. Williams (2022)
- Carol V. Robinson (2023)
- Jennifer Brodbelt (2024)
This article about an American scientist in academia is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e