An Interview with Joseph Wang
Abstract
Professor Joseph Wang of the University of California San Diego (UCSD), USA, is the first to be awarded the IUPAC Analytical Chemistry Medal—an award that recognizes a significant lifetime contribution to analytical chemistry and for researchers who have a substantial record of achievements demonstrated by the number and quality of their publications, by being actively involved in international partnerships as well as by their commitment in the training of the next generation of analytical chemists.

Joseph Wang
He spoke with Dr. Vera Koester of ChemistryViews about his current research, especially the exciting development of wearables, and giants in chemistry.
What does it mean to you to receive the IUPAC Analytical Chemistry Medal and to be the first to receive it?
It has been a great surprise and is a great honor. I have received numerous international awards, and this is a kind of global recognition. In analytical chemistry we don’t have a global award, which makes this very prestigious.
What are current trends in the field of sensors?
There is this trend of moving away from the big laboratory to smaller and smaller home testing and towards the body: the lab on the skin or in the mouth. That’s true for all techniques. This field began benefitting from nanotechnology 10 to 20 years ago.
I’m glad to be part of this revolution of moving to home testing and towards real-time on-body testing.
So do you think in 50 years’ time we will measure everything that we are doing right away?
Oh, yes, in 50 years for sure. The future will bring increasingly smaller sensors. So at some point you will have a complete lab under your skin. You will swallow a lab in a capsule—namely swallow a small capsule that will then analyze your gut. In fact, you will see that within 10 years. We don’t have to wait 40 or 50 years for that.
Sounds amazing but also scary. You have access to so many sensors, what do you monitor on yourself?
Oh, mainly my steps and sometimes my blood pressure.
What do you like most about IUPAC and what do you think could be different?
IUPAC is responsible for somehow standardizing everything. That is very good. Even in electrochemistry, we have different nomenclatures. Sometimes we use different names for the same techniques or present results in different ways. There was also a lot of confusion in the beginning about what exactly a biosensor is. In my opinion, they did a good job in defining it.
It’s also extremely important to take a global perspective. In materials, we have MRS as the global conference for material science; Pittcon is the biggest international conference in analytical chemistry. IUPAC needs to have more visibility. I would like to see IUPAC take a leading role in the top sciences. Merging IUPAC’s analytical topics and sessions with Pittcon would mean more visibility for analytical chemistry.
Read full interview in ChemistryViews: https://doi.org/10.1002/chemv.202100077
ChemistryViews is the online science news magazine of Chemistry Europe, an organization of 16 European chemical societies. It informs about what is happening in the global chemistry community and has a strong focus on the people behind the science. It covers new ideas, educates, and entertains.
©2021 IUPAC & De Gruyter. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. For more information, please visit: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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- Masthead - Full issue pdf
- Features
- Restructuring IUPAC at the Turn of the 20th Century
- Systems Thinking and Sustainability
- IOCD turns 40
- IUPAC Top Ten Emerging Technologies in Chemistry 2021
- IUPAC Wire
- Chemistry International–Freely-Available Across the World
- IUPAC Announces the 2021 Top Ten Emerging Technologies in Chemistry
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