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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
October
U. of I. chemistry professor
wins Packard Fellowship
Jeff
Unger, News Bureau 217-333-1085
10/20/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
University
of Illinois Photo |
| Chemist
Benjamin
McCall is among 20 researchers named a 2006 Packard
Fellow. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Benjamin McCall, a professor of chemistry
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, is among 20 U.S.
researchers named 2006 Packard Fellows for science and engineering by
the David and Lucile Packard Foundation. He will receive $625,000 during
the next five years to enhance his research efforts.
McCall, who joined the U. of I. faculty in 2004, has built a research
program in astrochemistry, using the tools of gas phase molecular spectroscopy
to address both fundamental chemical problems and longstanding problems
in molecular astrophysics.
In recognizing McCall’s work, the foundation cited his use of
ion optics to pull carbocations from a supersonically expanding plasma
into a fast ion beam, which is probed by ultrasensitive direct absorption
spectroscopy.
“McCall is one of the most spectacular young physical chemists
in the United States,” said Steve Zimmerman, the head of the U.
of I. chemistry department. “His research has the potential to
revolutionize our understanding of the spectra of ions in the gas phase
and of the chemistry of interstellar clouds.
“He has embarked on an ambitious program to perform novel and
challenging experiments that will give unprecedented insights into the
high-resolution spectra of a series of key molecular ions in interstellar
clouds. The results of his experiments are certain to have a profound
impact on many areas of chemistry, such as carbocation intermediates,
as well as on the field of astrophysics, since many of these species
are expected to be present in the interstellar medium.”
McCall joins previous U. of I. Packard Fellowship winners in chemistry,
including Martin Gruebele, Neil Kelleher, Nancy Makri, Todd Martinez,
Scott Silverman and Jonathan Sweedler.
McCall earned his bachelor’s degree in chemistry from the California
Institute of Technology in 1995 and a joint doctorate in chemistry and
astronomy and astrophysics from the University of Chicago in 2001. He
then held a prestigious Miller Fellowship at the University of California
at Berkeley.
In July, he was named a recipient of a Presidential Early Career Award
for Scientists and Engineers. McCall’s other honors include a
National Science Foundation Career Award and a Camille and Henry Dreyfus
New Faculty Award.
The fellowship program was established in 1988 and arose out of David
Packard’s commitment to strengthening university-based science
and engineering programs. By supporting unusually creative researchers
early in their careers, the foundation hopes to develop scientific leaders,
further the work of promising young scientists and engineers, and support
efforts to attract talented graduate students into university research
in the United States.
The 2006 Fellows were nominated by presidents of 50 universities that
participate in the fellowship program. The 100 nominations were reviewed
by the Fellowship Advisory Panel, a group of nationally recognized scientists,
which then recommended 20 Fellows for approval by the Packard Foundation
Board of Trustees.
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