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Home » Archives for October 2017

October 2017

Archives for October 2017

Voices and ideas: An ethical chemist

October 24, 2017 by newframe

Jeffrey KovacBy Grant Currin

First published on The Key Reporter Phi Beta Kappa’s Publication for News and Alumni Relations

Questions of scientific ethics were anything but hypothetical during the 1950s and ‘60s, when chemists were developing napalm and physicists were perfecting the weapons their countries would use if the Cold War turned hot.

Jeffrey Kovac was a teenager at the time.

“My interest [in scientific ethics] came from the fear of nuclear war during my childhood and me wondering about the ethical questions that the scientists who developed the bomb might have had,” he said.

Kovac graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Reed College in 1970. In 1976, after earning a PhD in chemistry from Yale University and completing a post-doc at MIT, Kovac accepted a position at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, where he is still a member of the faculty.

During the first decades of his career, Kovac pursued a conventional research agenda and taught courses in general, physical, and polymer chemistry. His research focus began to shift in the late 1980s after he developed a new course for undergraduates.

“I was teaching the capstone course in chemistry that was supposed to look at the field from a broader perspective,” he said. “There were stories of scientific misconduct in the press, so I decided to introduce ethics into the course.”

Kovac collected those stories and adapted them for classroom use. After thinking and writing further on professional and scientific ethics, he incorporated dozens of those moral problems into The Ethical Chemist, a textbook described in its preface as “a self-contained introduction to professional ethics for both chemistry students and practicing chemists.”

Since first publishing The Ethical Chemist in 1993, Kovac has focused his energy on researching and writing about scientific ethics from philosophical and historical perspectives. Though he still teaches chemistry courses, Kovac’s research has moved from the sciences to the humanities. He now writes on ethics, history, and pedagogy, mostly for scientific audiences and advocates for ethics education.

After two decades of teaching and writing in his new fields, Kovac has been recognized by the international scientific community. In 2016, the Swiss Academy of Sciences invited him to deliver a number of lectures inaugurating the organization’s series on ethics, and earlier this year Kovac participated in a panel on scientific ethics at the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting.

Kovac explained the wide range of his scholarly interests by pointing back to the first years of his academic life.

“My transition from full time research in chemistry to scholarship in the humanities is the result of the liberal arts education that I received at Reed College where I was able to study history and philosophy in depth in parallel with chemistry, physics and mathematics,” he explained.

“At Reed the disciplinary boundaries were quite fluid and there was lively dialogue between students and faculty in different fields, so I learned to think broadly, which is one of the ideals of Phi Beta Kappa.”

Kovac has demonstrated his commitment to Phi Beta Kappa’s mission in other aspects of his professional life. He leads College Scholars, the University of Tennessee’s interdisciplinary honors program, and has held a number of positions in Phi Beta Kappa, first as president of the University of Tennessee chapter (1989-1990 and 1999-2016) and now as a member at large of the Phi Beta Kappa senate and as a member of the selection committee for the Phi Beta Kappa Book Award in Science.

Note: A revised edition of The Ethical Chemist will be published by Oxford University Press in the near future.

Grant Currin (ΦBK, University of Tennessee, 2017) currently lives in Mallorca, Spain, where he works as a part-time English teacher. The University of Tennessee is home to the Epsilon of Tennessee Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa.

(Posted on 10/25/2017 )

Filed Under: News

Passing of Earl Wehry

October 17, 2017 by newframe

Dear Chemistry Community:

Earl WehryIt is with sadness that I have to announce the passing of Earl L. Wehry, Emeritus Professor in Chemistry.  Earl was born in 1941, received his B.S. in Chemistry from Juniata College and a PhD in Chemistry from Purdue.  He joined the faculty of the University of Tennessee in 1970 and rose through the ranks achieving Full Professor in 1977.  He retired in 1996 after 26 years of loyal and productive service to the Department of Chemistry, the College and the University.  During his career at UT, he mentored 19 students to the PhD and 5 students to MS degrees.  He was recognized for his research contributions in Analytical Chemistry with a Chancellor’s award for Research and Creative Achievement and Science Alliance Awards throughout their existence.  He published more than 110 research papers in refereed publications as well as several monographs associated with various spectrometric methods of analysis.  He was known nationally as an expert in phosphorescence and fluorescence spectroscopy.  There is no information on services at this time.

The memorial gathering will be held on Saturday, January 20th starting at 10:30 AM in 511 Buehler Hall. An agenda is being developed, but after hearing from friends, colleagues and mentors, we will provide lunch so we can continue to share stories. Please mark this important event on your calendar and plan to attend if possible.

Chuck Feigerle
Professor and Head
Department of Chemistry
University of Tennessee
Knoxville, TN 37996-1600

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Earl Wehry

Professor Musfeldt Named 2017 APS Fellow

October 14, 2017 by newframe

Janice Musfeldt, Ziegler Professor of Chemistry, was elected to the 2017 class of American Physical Society (APS) FelloJanice Musfeldt, Ziegler Professor of Chemistry, was elected to the 2017 class of American Physical Society (APS) Fellows. The APS Fellowship is a distinct honor signifying recognition by one’s professional peers.

Musfeldt was nominated by APS Division of Materials Physics for her “contributions to the spectroscopy of quantum materials with an emphasis on high magnetic field effects in multiferroics, quantum magnets, and nanomaterials.”

The APS Fellowship Program recognizes members who have made exceptional contributions to the physics enterprise, including outstanding physics research, important applications of physics, leadership in or service to physics, or significant contributions to physics education. Each year, no more than one half of one percent of the Society’s membership is elected to the status of Fellow.

Musfeldt obtained her B.S. in chemical engineering from University of Illinois in 1984 and completed her Ph.D. study in physical chemistry at University of Florida in 1992.  She worked as a post doctoral research associate at the Departement de Physique, Universite de Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada from 1993 to 1994, and joined the faculty at the Department of Chemistry, State University of New York at Binghamton prior to coming to the University of Tennessee, Knoxville in 2001.

Musfeldt has received multiple awards and recognitions throughout her career, including 1996 NSF CAREER Award, 2001 NSF Creativity Award, 2010 UT Chancellor’s Award for Research and Creative Achievement, and 2010 – 2014 and 2015 – 2019 Ziegler Professorship.

Musfeldt’s Group’s research focuses on studying the behavior of materials under extreme conditions. The group is well known for their spectroscopic work in high magnetic fields and pressures, under unusual chemical and photochemical activation, and at very small sizes where quantum confinement becomes apparent. Recently, the group along with other collaborators received $1.6 Million NSF-DMREF Award for Advanced Materials Research.

Filed Under: News

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