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Working Hard and Playing Harder: Meet Hong Zhang

Committed ACS volunteer and analytical chemist who grew up in the midst of China鈥檚 Cultural Revolution
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Hong Zhang, ACS Volunteer and Analytical Chemist
Hong Zhang, ACS Volunteer and Analytical Chemist

You wouldn鈥檛 want to play table tennis with Hong Zhang. That is,聽unless you are very, very good. She鈥檚 been playing since she was a young child growing up in聽Dujiangyan聽(Sichuan province, China) and medaled in the National Senior Games Women鈥檚 Doubles Table Tennis tournament in both 2013 and 2017.

She plays a few times a week and belongs to three local table tennis clubs. But she鈥檚 not idle the rest of her time. Far from it. As Chemistry Lead at the Advanced Testing Laboratory (ATL) in Cincinnati, Ohio, she develops analytical methodologies for LC/GC/AA/ICP/Titration Analytical Chemistry for Good Laboratory Practice GLP, as well as process optimization and project management for the company.聽

While working long, hard hours at her 鈥渄ay job,鈥� she also has represented the聽ACS聽Cincinnati Section for the past 15 years.聽In her roles with ACS, she has led聽Earth Day聽and聽National Chemistry Week (NCW)聽events at multiple venues, such as the Museum Center in Cincinnati, and was recently named one of ACS鈥檚聽2021 Outreach Volunteers of the Year.

Working Woman聽

Zhang was born in China. Her father was a hydroelectric engineer and professor. Her mother taught middle school and later worked as an administrator in the local water works department.聽聽

She was still in primary school at the start of China鈥檚 Cultural Revolution (a period from roughly 1966-1976). 鈥淒uring that time, everything changed,鈥� Zhang recalls. 鈥淢y mother was sent to the countryside to work as a laborer. My father was forced to leave home and was isolated due to his university participation in the Three Principles of People Youth League, organized by the Nationalist Party. I stayed home with my younger brother to manage our daily lives.鈥澛�

Even so, both parents continued to emphasize education, asking that Zhang and her brother practice Chinese calligraphy daily, filling at least three pages with letters, and in later years write poems based on photos published in the newspapers.聽聽

In China, there is not a lot of discrimination regarding women in the workforce. 鈥淥f course, every family is different but in my case my parents insisted that both my brother and I have a solid education and use it to get ahead in our lives.鈥澛犅�

During high school, Zhang attended a boarding school in the countryside, about 10 miles from her home. There was no electricity or tap water. She would walk home from the school each weekend to visit and devote herself to her studies during the week. Upon completion, she was sent to the countryside to work as an 鈥渆ducated youth鈥� farmer. It was hard work, and she was unsure about her future.聽聽

Luckily for her, China was undergoing change and started to open its doors to the outside world. Zhang took her college entrance exams and was accepted into Sichuan University, a prestigious university in China. She graduated with a bachelor鈥檚 in Engineering, Chemical Fibers in 1982 and went on to complete her Master鈥檚 in Engineering, Polymer Material Science and Technology in 1985. She played volleyball for Sichuan University throughout her college years and maintained a high GPA.聽

Moving to the U.S.聽

After graduation from Sichuan University, Zhang taught classes at Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology to senior college students about chemical fiber structures and properties, as well as chemical fiber manufacturing. She next applied to and was accepted to the University of Cincinnati. Her husband and young son, then age 1, moved to America, too.聽

She graduated from the University of Cincinnati in 1997 with a PhD in Analytical Chemistry. She worked as a scientist for several employers before accepting a position as a senior scientist with ATL in 2002.聽聽

At ATL she works as an Analytical Chemist and a Lead in the chemistry laboratory. 鈥淭hat means I answer questions from the analysts doing the tests when they can鈥檛 perform the tests or run into challenges.鈥� She also prepares proposals for the Client Service teams, estimating the time and cost to complete a contract -- or asking questions if her team does not understand the methods being requested or other parameters.聽

She鈥檚 enjoyed her work with ACS, noting that her fellow volunteers -- in particular Ed Escudero, a chemistry teacher at The Summit Country Day School; Susan Hershberger, a chemistry professor at Miami University; and Donna Wiedemann, a senior chemist at P&G -- have a lot of enthusiasm and excitement about what they鈥檙e doing. Zhang attends monthly meetings and volunteer activities with the support of ATL. 鈥淚鈥檓 grateful that ATL pays my ACS membership, meeting fee and travel expenses,鈥� she says.聽聽

New Possibilities聽

This hard worker will retire in the next five years or so, and she鈥檒l be setting new goals. One area of focus will be in helping to educate the next generation of scientists. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 really my experience and my strength,鈥� she says. 鈥淥f course I鈥檒l still participate in NCW, and the occasional science fair.鈥澛犅�

But lying in a hammock seems not to be on the schedule. 鈥淭here are people, and even my kids, now ages 30 and 24, who don鈥檛 understand why I work so hard, but I have always put my work first. That鈥檚 because of the way I was raised -- the work in the countryside, the Cultural Revolution and, most importantly, my family鈥檚 insistence on education.鈥澛犅�

鈥淢any people growing up in China, and especially women, did not make it this far,鈥� she adds. 鈥淚 attribute my success to my family.鈥澛�

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