Remembering Ted Kuwana


Theodore (Ted) Kuwana, PhD
August 3, 1931–January 1, 2022

Emeritus Distinguished Professor Dr. Ted Kuwana, 90, of Seattle, WA, died at University of Washington Northwest Hospital after several weeks of pneumonia. He was the founding father of a new field in chemistry called spectroelectrochemistry, which was created by combining two well-known analytical techniques of electrochemistry and spectroscopy. He was first author on the first published article in this field in 1964, which described the use of tin oxide-coated glass surfaces (optically transparent electrodes) for following the absorbance changes of different electroactive species during electrolysis.

He was a chemistry professor at University of California Riverside, Case Institute of Technology (later Case Western Reserve), Ohio State University, and University of Kansas (KU). He authored more than 200 journal articles from 1956–2015, edited a three-volume book Physical Methods in Modern Chemical Analysis, and held three patents. He trained 72 graduate students and leaves an impressive academic legacy, with many former students in leadership positions at universities, in government, and in industry.

He often said, “I’m not teaching chemistry, I’m teaching students how to think.”

Ted was born in Idaho Falls on a potato farm to Japanese immigrant (Issei) parents Nenokichi and Yoshino. The family leased the land, as it was illegal for them to own it. Ted was the youngest of six children (Todd, Mas, Mits, Jessie and Aiko), all who predeceased him. His father died when Ted was 10 and his mother died when he was 12; his older brothers took over the farm work and his sisters helped look after Ted. His mother’s dying wish was for Ted to go to college.

He had no money for college, but found Antioch College in Ohio, which offered a work-study program. He was fortunate to get a work-study position in a chemistry lab and authored a published paper as an undergrad. He earned his BS in 1954, then his MS at Cornell. He didn’t realize that the scholarship he was offered at Cornell had to pay for everything, and ended up with $5 left each month for food. He then went to KU and earned his PhD in 1959. He often quoted Dr. Ralph Adams, who said, “If you love what you do, the rewards will take care of themselves.”

It was at UC Riverside as a Visiting Assistant Professor in 1960 where he met Jane Bader, who would become his wife and editor of everything he (and much of his lab) wrote. It can’t be overstated how important her assistance was with his career, as she understood the chemistry and was a talented writer and editor.

He was proud to return to his alma mater KU (1985-2002) as a Regents Distinguished Professor tasked with promoting research and economic development statewide. He had strong collaborations and friendships with scientists in Japan and in 1987 proposed Hiratsuka, a large city an hour south of Tokyo, to become Lawrence’s sister city. Since then, hundreds of high school and college students have participated in exchange programs between the two places.

Over his career, Ted was the recipient of numerous awards for his achievements in developing the fields of spectroelectrochemistry, bioelectroanalytical chemistry and chemically modified electrodes. Awards include the American Chemical Society Division of Analytical Chemistry’s J. Calvin Giddings Award for Excellence in Education (2004); EPSCoR Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award (2002); American Chemical Society Division of Analytical Chemistry Award in Electrochemistry (1995); The Japan Society for Analytical Chemistry Honorary Membership and Medal (1991); and the Society of Electroanalytical Chemists C.N. Reilly Award (1989).

Ted's legacy includes educational resources such as the Analytical Sciences Digital Library, for which he was the managing director. Even after he retired in 2002, he was key in the development and management of this NSF-funded free online resource about chemical measurement and instrumentation. He was active in addressing the issue of how to teach more effectively and led efforts to create problem-based learning modules. He conducted summer teaching sessions for faculty at smaller undergrad institutions.

In the words of colleague Alex Scheeline, “Ted was someone of vast perspective, practical insight, understated enthusiasm, and high standards. Not to mention his excellent taste in restaurants. Ted is a man of impeccable integrity, a dedicated analytical electrochemist, and a savant who saw how to harness the internet to improve analytical education in a practical way that anticipated the needs of the COVID era by 20 years.”

Ted is survived by his wife Jane; son Eric Kuwana, a lawyer who divides his time between Gibson Island, MD, and New York City; and daughter Ellen Kuwana, a scientific writer and editor who lives in Seattle, WA. Ted and Jane have four granddaughters: Eric’s daughters Claire Kuwana, a senior at Northwestern Univ. and Camille Kuwana, a sophomore at Univ of Chicago; Ellen’s daughters Mikka Hoffman, a senior at UCLA and Kira Hoffman, a first-year student at UC Berkeley.


His chemistry colleagues were his family. His grandchildren and students called him TK.

TK will be deeply missed.


Donations in Ted’s honor can be made to: