Csaba Horváth Young Scientist Award

HPLC 2014 New Orleans, USA:  William Black, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, USA

Horvath

About the Award

The purpose of the Award is to honor the memory of Csaba Horváth and recognize his contributions to HPLC, including his interest in fostering the careers of young people in separations science and engineering. The award includes an invitation to speak at the HPLC 2015 symposium in Geneva, a grant to support travel to that meeting, and a trophy engraved with the winner’s name. The award is sponsored by HPLC, Inc.

Eligibility Criteria

All presenters of oral contributions (excepting past winners) who are less than 35 years of age at the time of their lecture are eligible for consideration. Candidates will be required to provide evidence of eligibility (e.g., passport, driver’s license.)

To Apply

Upon submission of your abstract, please select the box that states, “I would like to be considered for the Csaba Horváth Award.”

Selection Process

The Scientific Committee selects abstracts for inclusion in the oral program. An Award Jury judges the eligible presentations and chooses a winner. The winner will be announced at the closing ceremony.

About Csaba Horváth

Professor Csaba Horváth (1930-2004) was born in Hungary and graduated in chemical engineering from the Budapest Institute of Technology. After receiving his Ph.D. in physical chemistry at the J.W. Goethe University in Frankfurt under the direction of Prof. Halász, he immigrated to the United States in 1963 and started research at the Harvard Medical School. In the following year, Dr. Horváth moved to Yale where he designed and built the first high performance liquid chromatograph to demonstrate the feasibility and potential of HPLC in bioseparation sciences. He chaired the Department of Chemical Engineering at Yale from 1987 to 1993 and was named as Roberto C. Goizueta Professor of Chemical Engineering in 1998. Professor Horváth contributed close to 300 publications to the field of separation sciences and had nine patents. His main topics were all fundamental aspects of separations, including instrumentation, stationary phase designs, and mechanisms of separation processes, as well as their application mainly to biological and biomedical research, especially for the high-resolution separation of proteins and peptides.

Past recipients of the Csaba Horváth Young Scientist Award

 

HPLC 2006 San Francisco, USA Norma Scully, University of Cork, Ireland
HPLC 2007 Gent, Belgium Caterina Temporini, University of Pavia, Italy
HPLC 2008 Baltimore, USA Jude Abia, University of Tennessee, USA
HPLC 2009 Dresden, Germany André de Villiers, Stellenbosch University, South Africa
HPLC 2010 Boston, USA Jesse Omamogho, University College Cork, Ireland
HPLC 2011 Budapest, Hungary Matthias Verstraeten, Free University of Brussels, Belgium
HPLC 2012 Anaheim, USA Stefan Bruns, Philipps-Universität Marburg, Germany
HPLC 2013 Amsterdam, The Netherlands James Grinias, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, USA