Nobel Prize in Chemistry
In the 1960s and 1970s, three scientists, working independently, developed closely related methods for creating complex carbon-based molecules, helping to set the stage for a revolution in the development and synthesis of medicines. In October their seminal contribution to modern organic chemistry was honored with the 2010 Nobel Prize for Chemistry. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences hailed Richard F. Heck, Akira Suzuki, and Ei-ichi Negishi Gr’63 for developing a tool that “has vastly improved the possibilities for chemists to create sophisticated chemicals, for example carbon-based molecules as complex as those created by nature itself.”
Palladium-catalyzed cross coupling, as the techniques are known, solved the thorny problem of binding carbon atoms, which do not easily react with one another. Previous methods relied on reactions that filled test tubes with too many unwanted byproducts for complex molecules to be created.
Negishi, who was a PhD student of professor Alan Day at Penn in the 1950s, is currently the Herbert C. Brown Distinguished Professor of Chemistry at Purdue University, where he has spent most of his career. –T.P. |
|

Nov | Dec 2010 contents
Gazette Home

Gazetteer
Making History campaign reaches $2.85 billion
Northwestern’s J. Larry Jameson named new medical dean and EVP
Thouron program marks 50 years
Synthetic life “not a novel thing” says Bioethics Commission witness
Convocation: Passion and purpose drew Penn to Class of 2014
Silicon Valley moves east for Supernova conference
Ei-ichi Negishi Gr’63 shares Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Screening for cancer with vinegar and a cellphone camera
Penn Guardian offers GPS location in emergencies
A grandson’s memories of Eisenhower in retirement
Wharton model for movies gives “formulaic” a whole new meaning
Football-induced brain injuries possibly linked to student’s suicide
Sports
Bagnoli becomes Penn’s winningest football coach
Scoreboard

|