Officers
Remarks from Chair
Election Information and Ballot
Notes from the Secretary
Council Report
Biophysical Subdivision
Theoretical Subdivision
Poster Session Awards
Request for Symposia Topics and Speakers
Recent Symposia Topics
Technical Program — 233st National Meeting — Chicago, IL
Call for Papers — 234nd National Meeting — Boston, MA
Restrictions for Speakers for PHYS Symposia
Submission of Abstracts
General Information for Contributed Papers
Future ACS Meetings
Membership Information
Membership Application
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OFFICERS |
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Chair (8/06-07) Bruce D. Kay Chair Elect (8/06-07) Gregory A. Voth Secretary/Treasurer (8/06-11) Anne> B. McCoy |
Vice-Chair ( 8/06-07) Laurie J. Butler Vice Chair Elect (8/06-07) Martin Head-Gordon Past Chair (8/05-06) Barbara Garrison |
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EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE |
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Mark A. Johnson (06-09) Yale University Jingsong Zhang (07-10) University of California, Riverside Branka M. Ladanyi (05-08) Colorado State University |
William F. Polik (06-09) Hope College William F. Schneider (05-08) Notre Dame University Gustavo E. Scuseria (06-09) Rice University |
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COUNCILORS |
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John E. Adams (06-08) University of Michael R. Berman (06-08) AFOSR |
Ellen Stechel (07-09) Sandia National Labs John T. Yates (05-07) University of Pittsburgh |
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ALTERNATE COUNCILORS |
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Peter B. Armentrout (05-07) University of Utah Edwin J. Heilweil (06-08) NIST |
Anne Meyers Kelley (05-07) University of California, Merced James Lisy |
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BIOPHYSICAL SUBDIVISION |
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Chair (8/06-07) Jeffrey Saven Chair-Elect (8/06-07) Cecilia Clementi |
Vice-Chair (08/06-07) Martin Zanni Secretary To Be Announced Past Chair (8/05-06) Jay R. Winkler |
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THEORETICAL SUBDIVISION |
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Chair (8/06-07) Angel Garcia Chair-Elect (8/06-07) Todd G. Martinez |
Vice-Chair (8/05-06) Bernard Schlegel Secretary (8/06-07) Jan Steckel Past Chair (8/06-07) Krishnan Raghavachar |
Remarks from the Division Chair
Spring, 2007
The Spring National ACS Meeting in Chicago is coming up March 25-29, and I look forward to seeing many of you at the outstanding program that Greg Voth has put together. The list of symposia is given later in this newsletter and the full technical program is available at the ACS web site (http://oasys2.confex.com/acs/233nm/techprogram/) .
We also have three additional award winners who will be presenting their award addresses in award symposia
cosponsored by both the Physical and Colloid and Surface Chemistry Divisions. The Physical Chemistry Division also gives awards for the best student posters at each meeting. The
awardees for the Fall 2006 meeting in San Francisco are given later in this newsletter. Their pictures
can be found on the web.
(http://hackberry.chem.trinity.edu/PHYS/PosterAwardWinnersF06.html)
The winners of the student poster awards in Chicago will be posted on this site shortly after the meeting.
The PHYS Division functions because of the excellent volunteers within the division. I would like to invite
all Physical Division members to become more active in the Division, as officers or executive committee
members or as symposium organizers. If you are interested in being an officer or being on the Executive
Committee, please contact me (bruce.kay@pnl.gov), and I will forward your name to the Nominating Committee.
If you would like to organize a symposium, Laurie Butler (L-Butler@uchicago.edu) is Program Chair for 2008
and Martin Head-Gordon (mhg@bastillee.cchem.berkeley.edu) is the Program Chair for 2009.
Finally, I would like to thank the all officers and staff of the Physical Division for their unwavering
dedication and hard work. The past two Chairs, Barbara Garrison and David Nesbitt provided endless
advice, help, and encouragement that has made my job much easier. Our past Secretary/Treasurer, Ken
Jordan, and his assistant, Elaine Springel, worked tirelessly on behalf of the Division for the past
five years. Their efforts have been essential to the smooth running of the PHYS Division and I would
like to give them thanks from all of us in the Division. I am delighted that
Anne McCoy (mccoy@chemistry.ohio-state.edu) from Ohio State, a former member of the Executive
Committee, has agreed to take on the responsibilities of Secretary-Treasurer of the Physical Division
for the next five years. In this role, Anne will be expertly assisted by Betsy
Foran (acspchem@chemistry.ohio-state.edu). We can all take great pride in the health, vitality, and scientific diversity of physical chemistry.
Let's keep up the good work! I hope that you will take the opportunity to let me know (bruce.kay@pnl.gov)
of any ways in which you think that the Physical Chemistry Division can better serve its membership and
help contribute to our field. Election Information and Ballot
The Bylaws of the Division of Physical Chemistry, approved
in 1999, call for the Division Chair to appoint a three-person, Nominating
Committee before the spring meeting. A
complete slate of candidates prepared by this committee will consist of one
candidate for Vice-Chair-Elect, one candidate for each vacancy on the
Executive Committee, and one candidate for each vacancy that may have
developed in the ranks of the division Councilors, Alternate Councilors, and
Secretary/Treasurer position. The
Vice-Chair-Elect automatically becomes the Vice-Chair, Chair-Elect, Chair, and
Immediate past-Chair in each succeeding year.
Thus, this person makes a commitment to serve five years on the
Executive Committee. In the year this
person serves as Chair-Elect, the duties of Program Chair are also his or
hers. The term of office for other
Executive Committee members, Councilors, and Alternate Councilors is three
years. The Secretary/Treasurer serves
five years. The Secretary/Treasurer is required to announce the slate of
candidates in the fall newsletter. To increase the input
of the members in this nominating process and to broaden the pool of
candidates, the Executive Committee seeks input directly from members for use
by the Nominating Committee. Any member
may suggest nominees to any of the officers of the PHYS division in
writing. The nominee must agree to
serve. Additional nominations can come from the membership in the
following fashion: A petition candidate
must be supported by the signatures of not fewer than 4% of the members of the
PHYS division in good standing (presently approximately 4,000). No signature shall be valid if it appears on
more than one nominating petition for the same vacancy during the same calendar
year. A letter shall be submitted from each petition nominee
stating willingness to be a candidate for election and to serve the Division
for a full term if elected. No nominee
may be a candidate for more than one vacancy.
If nominated for more than one vacancy, the nominee must choose which
nomination to accept. Four weeks from the date of the mailing of the fall
newsletter shall be allowed for additional nominations to be received by the
Secretary/Treasurer. All valid
nominations received within that period shall be accepted and no others. If no valid nominations are forthcoming from the membership,
the nominees submitted by the Nominating Committee for Vice-Chair-Elect,
Secretary/Treasurer, and membership on the Executive Committee are declared
elected. Regardless of whether petition nominees are validated or
not, the Bylaws require the Secretary/Treasurer to mail to every PHYS division
member a ballot that bears at a minimum the names and biographical sketches of
the single candidates for each Councilor and Alternate Councilor vacancy
submitted by the Nominating Committee. New Officers for the PHYS division
follow. The first six
physical chemistry officers assumed their respective offices at the close of
the national meeting in San Francisco,
CA. The Councilors and
vice-councilors begin their terms of service on January 1, 2007. The Physical Chemistry Division
thanks outgoing officers Barbara Garrison (Chair), Bruce D. Kay (Chair-Elect),
Gregory A. Voth (Vice-Chair), Laurie Butler
(Vice-Chair-Elect), Robert Levis (Executive Committee), Ellen Stechel (Councilor) and Patricia Thiel
(Alternate Councilor) for their service to the Division. Notes from the Secretary/Treasurer This newsletter contains information
about the ACS national meetings and any other items of interest to significant
numbers of PHYS Division members. All
members of the PHYS Division are welcome to submit items to the Secretary for
inclusion in this newsletter. The
deadlines are generally around December 1 and May 1 for the newsletters
appearing before the Spring and Fall ACS meetings,
respectively. Submissions may be made
via mail, FAX, or e-mail. The current ACS Bylaws & Regulations may be viewed at:
http://www.chemistry.org/portal/Chemistry?PID=acsdisplay.html&DOC=committees%5Ccnb%5Cindex.html. Click on the link
to Documents of the Committee and then on the link to Charter, Constitution, Bylaws, and Regulations of the American Chemical
Society (Bulletin 5). A copy of the bylaws and regulations
is also included on the Division’s web page
(http://hackberry.chem.trinity.edu/PHYS.) Councilor’s Report The major items expected to be on the
agenda for the upcoming Council meeting in Chicago include votes on three
proposed Bylaw changes and the selection of the President-Elect candidates for
next fall’s election. One of these
proposals, permitting prepayment of dues for two or three years at the current
dues rate, is not likely to stimulate much debate. A second item is a little more
controversial. That proposed Bylaw
amendment would restrict the ability of the Council Committee on Nominations
and Elections to nominate its current and former members for national offices
(President-Elect and members of the Board of Directors). The hot-button issue, though, is the proposed
change in the number of signatures needed to qualify petition candidates for
spots on election ballots. Some Councilors feel that it is too easy to sidestep the normal
nomination procedure and that the nomination-by-petition process has been
abused. Others feel that the
current system works well and does not need revision. (The change would increase the number of
signatures need by a President-Elect petition candidate by about a factor of 5
and would more than double the number needed to qualify an individual for a
Director-at-Large election. The petition
also contains wording that would affect the way that run-off elections are
handled, but those provisions have not attracted much attention.) At the meeting in Although
the audited financial numbers from 2006 are not yet available, my report of
last October indicating that the society would end the year showing a strong
financial performance appears to have been on target. We will get an update on the current
situation in the Committee on Budget and Finance and at Council, but it looks
like we finally have made up for the losses in unrestricted net assets that
resulted from the economic downturn of 2001.
I invite all members of PHYS to visit the Budget and Finance committee
pages at chemistry.org for more details about the society’s financial
position. Let me just mention one issue,
though, that is getting more and more attention by B&F and by the Board of
Directors. At one time, member dues
covered nearly the entire cost of ACS programs; however, those costs now are
being covered primarily from revenue generated by the business units (Chemical
Abstracts Service and ACS Publications).
Those units are expected to do well in the short term, but the future is
never a sure thing. As
always, members of PHYS are invited to contact me if they have any question
about Council activities. Biophysical Subdivision Subdivision membership is free to dues-paying members or
affiliates of the Division of Physical Chemistry. To join the Biophysical Subdivision, notify
the Chair, Jeffrey Saven, at the address in the table
of officers. Indicate that you wish to
join and mention that you belong to the PHYS Division. If you do not belong to the Division, you may
join both the Division and the Biophysical Subdivision by completing the
application form at the end of this newsletter. Theoretical Subdivision Subdivision membership is free to dues-paying members or
affiliates of the Division of Physical Chemistry. To join the Theoretical Subdivision, notify
the Chair, Angel Garcia, at the address in the table of officers. Indicate that you wish to join and mention
that you belong to the PHYS Division. If
you do not belong to the Division, you may join both the Division and the
Theoretical Subdivision by completing the application form at the end of this
newsletter. Student Poster Awards The winners of the Physical Chemistry
Student Poster Award Competition at the Fall 2006 ACS
meeting in San Francisco, CA, were: Congratulations to the presenters of these excellent
posters! Each winner received $300 and a
signed award certificate. The Physical
Chemistry Division thanks the many other people who entered the competition and
also the anonymous and impartial judges. Request for Symposia Topics and Speakers The Executive Committee solicits formal suggestions for symposia
and speakers for the meetings to be held in future years. The Executive Committee will meet in Chicago, IL
in March, 2007, to plan the programs for 2009. Please send your suggestions to the 2008 Program
Chair, Laurie J. Butler, at the address in the table of officers. The
deadline for receipt of suggestions is November 1, 2007. These suggestions will be essential input for
organizing the programs of the meetings.
For greatest effectiveness, follow these guidelines: a) Recommend a symposium topic,
organizer, and list of suggested speakers (a list of recent PHYS symposia follows for informational purposes). b) Provide
a brief description of the significance of the symposium. 227th ACS National
Meeting Emerging Ultrafast Spectroscopies: From Chemistry to Biophysics 228th ACS National
Meeting Philadelphia, PA Advance in Quantum Chemistry: Theory, Algorithms, & Applications 229th ACS National
Meeting Applications of Physical Chemistry
to Environmental & Biogeochemical Research 230th ACS National
Meeting Washington, DC Charger Transfer Processes: Making Connections 231st ACS National
Meeting Emerging Issues in Atmospheric Science: A Physical Chemistry Perspective 232nd ACS National Meeting Chemistry in Extreme Environments Spring 07 Meeting Technical Program March 25-29, 2007
Chicago, IL The 233nd American Chemical Society National Meeting will take place in Chicago,
IL during the week of March 25-29, 2007. Dr. Gregory A. Voth,
2007 Physical Chemistry Division Program Chair, has arranged a broad range of
topics in modern physical chemistry to be featured in symposia and a general
poster session at this meeting. The topical
symposia and their organizers are: VERY IMPORTANT NOTICE A significant portion of the
Division’s annual income is provided by the ACS, based in part on Division
members’ attendance at the national meetings.
On the advance meeting registration form, you will see a question such
as that given below. If you list the Physical Division, you will contribute
to our income and allow the Division to offer better symposia. Fall 2007 Meeting Call for Papers August 19-23, 2007
Program Chair: Gregory A. Voth,
Department of Chemistry, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, 84112; voth@chem.utah.edu Online
abstract submission for this meeting closes April 2, 2007. Please see
http://oasys.acs.org/.
for abstract submission access and guidelines.
Only electronic abstracts via the ACS online submittal system, OASys, will be accepted,
except by special arrangement with
the ACS symposium organizers. You can
check the Division’s website for specific deadlines.
The web page is http://hackberry.chem.trinity.edu/PHYS. Submit your abstract online at the ACS website: http://oasys.acs.org/.
Please see the
following for more information regarding submission. As is now customary, Program Chair Voth has
arranged for the presentation of contributed talks in each of the topical symposia. The
contributed talks will be selected by the individual symposium organizers from
among abstracts that explicitly request consideration for oral presentation. The criterion for selection will be close
connection with the topics addressed in the symposia. Abstracts not selected for oral presentation
will be assigned to the poster session(s), unless the authors request
otherwise. Since the organizers will not
be able to accommodate all requests, the poster sessions will be specifically
organized to group posters by symposium topic.
While the symposia do cover a wide range of topics, they cannot cover
the full depth and breadth of physical chemistry. The Division, therefore, also welcomes
general contributions to the poster sessions, which will be grouped by subject
area. The planned symposia and their organizers are:
Bruce D. Kay, Chair 1 year
Gregory A. Voth, Chair-Elect 1 year
Laurie J. Butler, Vice Chair 1 year
Martin Head-Gordon, Vice-Chair Elect 1
year
Anne B. McCoy, Secretary/Treasurer 5 years
Jingsong Zhang, Executive Committee 3 years
Ellen Stechel, Councilor 3 years
James A. Lisy, Alternate Councilor 3 years Anne B. McCoy
John E. Adams
Jeffrey Saven
Angel Garcia
Bruce D. Kay
Martin Head-Gordon
Recent Symposia Topics
Anaheim, CA
March 28-April 1, 2004
Industrial Applications of Theoretical Chemistry
Intermolecular Interactions &
Reactions Involving Ions & Open-Shell Systems
Mass Spectrometry of Biopolymers: From
Model Systems to Ribosomes
Mixed Quantum, Classical, and Semiclassical Dynamics
Nanocrystals & Nanotubes
Optical Microscopy Beyond the
Diffraction Limit
Protein Structure Prediction & Folding: Where Physical Chemistry
Meets Genomics
August 22-26, 2004
Biophysical Chemistry
& Novel Imaging of Single Molecules & Single Cells
Chemical Physics in Atmospheric Science
Chemistry at Ultra-Low TemperaturesCombustion Chemistry: From Elementary Reactions to Extensive
Reaction Mechanisms
Liquids & Liquid Interfaces
Molecular Origin of Replication
& Translation of Nuclei Acids
Quantum Classical Calculations in Chemistry
& Biochemistry
San Diego, CA
March 13-17, 2005
Biophysical Aspects of Protein
& Peptide Aggregation: Experiment
& Theory
Dynamics & Conductivity of Nanoparticles & Their Assemblies
Growth & Catalysis of Metal Overlays
Hydrogen Bonds: Developments in Experiment & Theory
NMR Research Developments in
Magnetic Resonance:
Novel Directions in Photonics: Nanophotonics
& Biophotonics
Water: Structure Dynamics & Reactions Across
the Phase Diagram
Aug 28 – Sept 1, 2005
Chemical Control of Oxide Material
Response
Computational Exploration of Energy
Landscapes: Challenges & Solutions
Influence of Local Structure &
Reagent Energy on Chemical Reactions at Solid Surfaces
Frontiers in Photobiology
Physical Chemistry Curriculum Reform
Update: Where are We & Where are
We Going?
Structures & Properties of
Small Clusters
Symposium on Ions in Complex
Physical, Chemical, & Biological Systems
Atlanta, GA
March 29-30, 2006
Interactions of Peptides &
Proteins with Membrane Surfaces
Molecular & Molecular-Scale
Electronics
Molecules in SpaceQuantum Molecular Dynamics in the
Condensed Phase: Towards Bridging the
Gap Between Theory & Experiment
Spectroscopy of Interfaces
Theoretical & Experimental
Advances in the Study of Low-Energy Electron-Induced Processes In Complex
Systems
San Francisco, CA
Sept 10-14, 2006
Cyber Science, Chemistry
Fundamentals of Metal Oxide
Catalysis
Physical Chemical Foundations of
Biological Membrane Phenomenon
Fifty Years of Electron Transfer
& RRKM Theories
Frontiers in Single-Molecule
Biophysical Chemistry and Imaging
Frontiers in Molecular Dynamics: Experiment & Theory
Theory of Rare Events &
Accelerated Dynamics
Physical Chemistry of Ionic Liquids
Restrictions on Speakers for PHYS Symposia
A speaker may give, at most, one invited talk in the PHYS Division in any given meeting. Note that this rule does not apply to contributed talks and posters, so there is still plenty of opportunity for all physical chemists to present their research results in the PHYS Division.
Submission of Abstracts
Abstract Requirements Submit a 150-word abstract via the ACS web-based submission system, OASys. Submission instructions and information on abstract requirements can be found at the ACS Web site, http://www.acs.org/meetings.
Request for Contributed Oral Presentations: Authors who submit a contributed paper to the program and wish their abstract to be considered for possible oral presentation in a topical symposium must indicate such preference. The abstract should be submitted to the symposium in which oral presentation is desired and is due one week prior to the deadline.
General Information for Contributed Papers
General Papers – Members are cordially invited to present papers at the poster sessions. Abstracts should be submitted as instructed on the ACS Meetings web page, http://www.acs.org/meetings. The deadline, as published in C&E News, on the OASys web site, and the call for papers must be observed to allow the ACS to compile the program and to print and to circulate the abstracts.
Future National ACS Meetings
|
Boston, MA, August 19-23, 2007 Program Chair: Gregory A. Voth |
New Orleans, LA, April 6-10, 2008 Program Chair:Laurie J. Butler |
|
Philadelphia, PA, August 17-21, 2008 Program Chair: Laurie J. Butler |
Salt Lake City, UT, March 22-26, 2009 Program Chair: Martin Head-Gordon |
Information and Rules Applying to All Contributed Poster Papers
1. No paper will be accepted unless an author expects to be present.
2. ACS Bylaws 3(a) require that “papers by American Chemists or chemical engineers not members of the Society shall not appear on the program unless they be joint with one or more Society members.”
3. Prospective poster presenters who also submit papers to other Divisions should inform the Chairman-Elects as to the Division, titles of papers and co-authors by the deadline date.
4. Each poster paper will have a poster board measuring 4’x8’.
5. All illustrations, charts, and textual material to be posted must be prepared in advance since materials for these purposes will not be available at the meeting.
6. Posters should be mounted prior to the opening of the session and left in place until the close. Authors are encouraged to be present the entire session.
7. There must be a heading (with letter at least 1” height) giving the title of the papers, the author(s), their affiliation(s), and the number assigned to it in the program.
8. Illustrative material will be read by attendees from a distance of 3’ or more, so lettering on illustrations should be at least 3/8” high.
9. There should be a logical sequence (introduction, development and conclusion) to the display and each sheet should be numbered.
10. Mounting the sheets on colored construction paper and using other techniques for improving graphic impact will enhance the presentation’s effectiveness. Ease of reading is far more important than artistic flair. Certain color combinations, for instance, may look beautiful but may be almost impossible to read, especially in the absence of optimum lighting.
11. Do NOT mount illustrations on heavy stock, which is difficult to mount on the poster boards.
12. Each author is responsible for mounting his or her material at least ˝ hour prior to the opening of the assigned poster session and removing it within ˝ hour after the close of the session. ACS cannot assume any responsibility for materials beyond those time limits.
13. Do provide sign-up sheets to record names and addresses of attendees who wish more information.
14. Do bring duplicates of data and conclusions. Duplicating facilities are unavailable through ACS.
15. ACS provides a modest supply of pushpins, masking tape, and felt-tipped pens, but it is wise to bring your own. Upon advance request, ACS will arrange for blackboards to be available in the room.
16. Admission to poster sessions will be by ACS meeting badge only.
17. A poster paper submitted to the Program Chair (before the deadline) for presentation at a national meeting should be considered accepted unless the author is specifically notified to the contrary by the Division of Physical Chemistry Program Chair.
American Chemical Society, Division of Physical Chemistry
Subdivision of Theoretical Chemistry and Subdivision of Biophysical Chemistry
We invite you to encourage non-members to join the PHYS division. It is the professional organization devoted to physical chemistry and physical chemists and can be most successful with maximum participation by physical chemists. Some of the more practical advantages of membership are:

Name Address City, State, Zip Country, Postal Code Telephone (w) (h) ACS Member? NO r YES r ® ACS member # Membership Categories (qualification) (CIRCLE ONE)
r Member (current ACS member) $15.00r Student (current Student ACS member) $ 5.00r Division Affiliate (Non-ACS member) $15.00r National Affiliate (current National Affiliate ACS member) $15.00 Subdivision Membershipr Theoretical Chemistry (no additional fee at this time)