Skip to content
Primary Menu

Long Luo awarded the 2025 Pittcon Achievement Award


""

 

longluo24

The Pittsburgh Conference Achievement Award is given annually to a researcher who has made a significant and independent impact in the area of analytical chemistry within the first ten years after his or her doctoral degree. The award has been presented jointly with Pittcon since 2002 and is given out each year at a special ceremony during the Pittcon Conference and Exposition. The recipient’s name and achievements are added to the Pittcon Hall of Fame, which conference attendees can visit at the show each year.

The 2025 PAA winner is Dr. Long Luo, University of Utah Department of Chemistry.

Pittcon.org stated, “Dr. Luo leads an interdisciplinary research group at the University of Utah. The core of his research lies in electrochemistry, with wide-ranging applications in organic synthesis, material science, sensing applications, and catalysis. His research seeks to answer real-world problems in energy, materials, and environmental monitoring. Dr. Luo is the co-author of about 65 publications.”

Dr. Long Luo is an Associate Professor of Chemistry at the University of Utah. He received his B.S. (2009) in applied chemistry from the Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics and his Ph.D. (2014) in chemistry from the University of Utah under the guidance of Prof. Henry S. White. Then, he worked as a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of Prof. Richard M. Crooks at the University of Texas at Austin. He started his independent career at Wayne State University in 2017 and spent seven years there before joining the University of Utah in the summer of 2024. He received the Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship, National Science Foundation CAREER Award, NIH Maximizing Investigators’ Research Award (MIRA), the Royce W. Murray Young Investigator Award from the Society for Electroanalytical Chemistry, Pittcon Achievement Award from the Society of Analytical Chemists of Pittsburgh, and Wayne State University Academy of Scholars Junior Faculty Award. He was selected as a Scialog Fellow, Chem Comm Emerging investigators, Anal. Bioanal. Chem. Young Investigators, Nanoscale Emerging Investigators, and a Langmuir inaugural Early Career Advisory Board Member. He also joined the Editorial Advisory Board of ACS Electrochemistry and the Journal of Electrochemistry. The research goal of his laboratory is to address the grand challenges of our times in environment, energy, and health by designing, discovering, synthesizing, and utilizing new functional materials and molecules and by developing novel analytical methods, tools, and devices.

Dr. Long said, “I am deeply honored to receive this award. I would like to express my gratitude to all the students and postdocs in my group for their hard work, as well as to my mentors and colleagues for their support. I am thrilled that this award recognizes our efforts to expand the impact of electroanalytical chemistry across various disciplines of chemistry, including organic synthesis, materials science, sensing, and catalysis. This award re-emphasizes the important role of electrochemistry in the field of chemistry.”

Read more about the award recipients from Pittcon.org.

For more information about the nominations, read here.

Read here about past winners are a who’s who of successful young analytical chemists.

Pictures: Professor Long Luo and his research group at the University of Utah Department of Chemistry.

Congratulations, Professor Long Luo!