John Texter (born August 9, 1949, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania) is an American engineer, chemist, and educator, and is professor of polymer and coating technology at Eastern Michigan University (EMU) in Ypsilanti, Michigan.[1] He is best known for his work in applied dispersion technology and small particle science, for his international conference organization activities, including Particles 2001,[2] Particles 2002, etc., and the Gordon Research Conferences, Chemistry at Interfaces[3] and Chemistry of Supramolecules and Assemblies,[4] and for his editing of the Primers page for nanoparticles.org.[5]
Texter received his secondary education at Penn Manor High School in Millersville, Pennsylvania, where he lettered in soccer and wrestling. He matriculated to Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, in 1967 with the aid of a Lehigh Merit Scholarship and graduated with a BSEE in 1971. He was mentored in his undergraduate years by John J. Karakash, who designed the Electrical Engineering curriculum at Lehigh to liberally educate through engineering. His proclivity for control theory sparked an interest in physiology and then biochemistry, and his undergraduate biochemistry studies led him to physical chemistry. He continued at Lehigh to obtain an MS in chemistry in 1973, an MS in mathermatics in 1976, and a Ph.D in chemistry in 1976. He was mentored in graduate education by Jim Sturm, Daniel Zeroka, Albert Zettlemoyer, Fred Fowkes, and Kamil Klier, his thesis advisor. Texter spent a postdoctoral year in biophysical spectroscopy at the University of California at Irvine and a postdoctoral year with Eugene S. Stevens at Binghamton University, developing a time-dependent Hartree–Fock model for circular dichroism in saccharides.
Texter has over 30 years experience in industrial small particle and coating technologies. He worked in the Eastman Kodak Research Laboratories from 1978 to 1998 and he was managing consultant for Strider Research Corporation from 1998 to 2002. From the spring of 2001 he served for a year as a rotator in the National Science Foundation Chemistry Division as Program Director of Experimental Physical Chemistry.
While at Eastman Kodak he was a prolific inventor and co-inventor in the field of dispersion technology, and he received 42 issued US Patents and numerous EU and PTO patents.
Texter joined the College of Technology of Eastern Michigan University in the fall of 2002 as professor of polymer and coating technology at the rank of full professor. In 2005 he was awarded tenure. Since joining EMU he also has been a faculty member of the Coatings Research Institute. He recently spent a sabbatical year near Berlin as a Fellow of the Max Planck Society with Professor Markus Antionetti at the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces.
His research has focused on small particle science and technology, the development of particle-based advanced materials, and polymeric advanced materias. His work has focused on applied problems in dispersion and materials technology for advanced coatings in imaging, antifouling, corrosion mitigation, and antimicrobial prophylaxis. He has made significant contributions to the understanding of microemulsion structure and the complex equilibria that exist among the exotic molecular complexes contained in microemulsions, as well as in microemulsion polymerization. Seminal self-diffusion studies done with collaborators at Eastman Kodak produced order parameters that proved transitions among such complex equilibiria are continuous phase transitions (chemical equilibria). More recently he has demonstrated thermally initiated microemulsion polymerization in bicontinuous microemulsions, wherein the expansion of the correlation length was only 20% relative to the precursor microemulsion, surpassing competitive attempts by two orders of magnitude.
In more recent years, he has become a leading innovator in the fields of stimuli responsive polymers and polymerized ionic liquids. Microemulsion polymerization of ionic liquid surfactant acrylates was used to produce transparent gels that reversibly undergo spinodal decomposition to open cell membranes and monoliths. Related nanolatexes have been formulated that appear to be the first experimental realizations of osmotic spheres.
Dr. Texter has received numerous awards and honors including being named in 2015 a Fellow of the American Chemical Society and in 1999 a Fellow of the Society of Imaging Science and Technology, receiving in 2013 a Macromolecular Science and Engineering Lecture Award, ACS Polymer Division Student Chapter, University of Michigan, receiving in 2009 the John A. Gordon Award for best paper from the Federation of Societies for Coatings Technology, receiving in 2009 a Diploma from the CBMM Łódź, Polish Academy of Sciences, receiving the 2007 Ronald W. Collins Distinguished Faculty Research Award, receiving in 2009 a Pfizer Research Award ($14,000), receiving in 2003 a DuPont Science and Engineering Award ($20,000), receiving in 1999 a Service Recognition Award from the ACS Division of Colloid and Surface Chemistry, receiving in 1999 a Team Achievement Award for Improved Ferrotyping, induction in 1995 into the Kodak Distinguished Inventors’ Gallery, receiving in 1995 an MRE Innovation Award for Nanocrystalline Technology, receiving in 1994 a CTO Patent Award for Innovation and Initiative in Patenting, listings in American Men and Women of Science, Who's Who in Science and Engineering, Who's Who in America, and various graduate fellowships.
Texter served as Chairman of the Division of Colloid and Surface Chemistry of the American Chemical Society in 1998 and in a variety of line officer and executive committee positions before and since (1991–2002), and returned to serve as Program Chair (2008–2010). He has organized many national and international conferences, including chairing the Gordon Research Conferences Chemistry of Interfaces (Interfacial Structure[3]) in Meriden, New Hampshire, in 1996 and Chemistry of Supramolecules and Assemblies (Functional Materials through Bottom-Up Self-Assembly[4]) in Barga, Tuscany in 2007. He has also organized and served as General Chair for the Particles Conferences Particles 2001[2], Particles 2002, through Particles 2013 in Dayton. He is a member of the American Chemical Society, the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, the American Physical Society, the Materials Research Society, the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers, and the Society for Imaging Science and Technology.
Texter and his wife Melanie Ann Martin have a son Kurt Martin Texter (born April 8, 1990), and a daughter Grace Martin Texter (born June 26, 1992). Kurt works as a graphic designer in San Francisco, and Grace works as a writer and artist in Manhattan.
The content is sourced from: https://handwiki.org/wiki/Biography:John_Texter