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Professor Andrew Ewing holds the position of Professor of Analytical Chemistry in the Department of Chemistry and Molecular Biology at the University of Gothenburg. He earned a B.S. degree in Chemistry from St. Lawrence University in 1979 and a Ph.D. in Chemistry from Indiana University Bloomington in 1983. Following his graduate studies, he joined the faculty at Pennsylvania State University in 1984, advancing to full professor and serving as the J. Lloyd Huck Chair in Natural Sciences from 1999 to 2010. In 2010, he relocated to Sweden to take up his current professorship at the University of Gothenburg, where he also held a European Union Marie Curie Chair from 2007 to 2010.
Ewing's research focuses on analytical chemistry at the micro- and nanoscale, employing electrochemistry, optical imaging with STED microscopy, and mass spectrometry techniques such as SIMS and NanoSIMS. These methods enable studies of chemical processes in single nerve cells, individual vesicles, neural communication within cell networks and the Drosophila nervous system, communication between organelles, and molecular messengers involved in cell differentiation. His pioneering contributions to understanding exocytosis and the contents of nanometer-sized vesicles in single cells have advanced the fields of neurochemistry and bioanalytical chemistry. He has produced approximately 380 peer-reviewed publications, accumulating over 30,000 citations and an h-index approaching 90, underscoring his substantial impact. Ewing has received major accolades, including three European Research Council Advanced Grants (2011, 2018, 2025; the latest €2.5 million), two Knut and Alice Wallenberg Scholar awards (2011, 2017), election to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences Chemistry Class (2012), the Ralph N. Adams Award in Bioanalytical Chemistry (2021), American Chemical Society Analytical Division Awards for Chemical Instrumentation (2006) and Electrochemistry (2013), John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship (1999), and Fellowship in the American Association for the Advancement of Science (2004). He teaches graduate-level courses in bioanalytical electrochemistry, spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, and analytical separations, as well as undergraduate analytical and bioanalytical chemistry.