| Nobel Prize in Chemistry | |
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Alfred Nobel was a Swedish chemist and the inventor of dynamite. Nobel recognized the destructive power of dynamite, but hoped that such power would lead to an end to warfare. However, dynamite was quickly exploited to develop newer, more deadly weapons. Not wanting to be remembered as the "merchant of death", an epitaph given him by a French newspaper in a mistaken obituary, Nobel wrote his will such that it would establish prizes in physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, literature, and peace to "those who, during the preceding year, shall have conferred the greatest benefit on mankind." A sixth category, economics, was added in 1969. It took some time to implement Nobel's wishes. The first Nobel prize was awarded in 1901, which was five years after Alfred Nobel's death. Note that the Nobel prize can only be won by individuals, there can be no more than three winners in a given year, and money is split equally between multiple winners. Each winner gets a gold medal, a sum of money, and a diploma.
Here is the list of the Nobel laureates in Chemistry:
Year
Laureate
Country
Research
1901 Jacobus H. van't Hoff Netherlands Discovered laws of chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure in solutions
1902 Hermann Emil Fischer Germany Synthetic studies of sugar and purine groups 1903 Svante A. Arrhenius Sweden Theory of electrolytic dissociation 1904 Sir William Ramsay Great Britain Discovered the noble gases 1905 Adolf von Baeyer Germany Organic dyes and hydroaromatic compounds 1906 Henri Moissan France Studied and isolated the element fluorine 1907 Eduard Buchner Germany Biochemical studies, discovered fermentation without cells 1908 Sir Ernest Rutherford Great Britain Decay of the elements, chemistry of radioactive substances 1909 Wilhelm Ostwald Germany Catalysis, chemical equilibria, and reaction rates 1910 Otto Wallach Germany Alicyclic compounds 1911 Marie Curie Poland-France Discovered radium and polonium 1912 Victor Grignard
Paul SabatierFrance
FranceGrignard's reagent
Hydrogenation of organic compounds in the presence of finely divided metals
1913 Alfred Werner Switzerland Bonding relations of atoms in molecules (inorganic chemistry) 1914 Theodore W. Richards United States Determined atomic weights 1915 Richard M. Willstätter Germany Investigated plant pigments, particularly chlorophyll
1916 The prize money was allocated to the Special Fund of this prize section 1917 The prize money was allocated to the Special Fund of this prize section 1918 Fritz Haber Germany Synthesized ammonia from its elements 1919 The prize money was allocated to the Special Fund of this prize section 1920 Walther H. Nernst Germany Studies on thermodynamics 1921 Frederick Soddy Great Britain Chemistry of radioactive substances, occurrence and nature of the isotopes 1922 Francis W. Aston Great Britain Discovered several isotopes, mass spectrograph 1923 Fritz Pregl Austria Microanalysis of organic compounds 1924 The prize money was allocated to the Special Fund of this prize section 1925 Richard A. Zsigmondy Germany, Austria Colloid chemistry (ultramicroscope) 1926 Theodor Svedberg Sweden Disperse systems (ultracentrifuge) 1927 Heinrich O. Wieland Germany Constitution of bile acids 1928 Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus Germany Study of sterols and their relation with vitamins (vitamin D) 1929 Sir Arthur Harden
Hans von Euler-ChelpinGreat Britain
Sweden, GermanyStudied fermentation of sugars and enzymes 1930 Hans Fischer Germany Studied blood and plant pigments, synthesized hemin
1931 Friedrich Bergius
Karl BoschGermany
GermanyDeveloped chemical high-pressure processes 1932 Irving Langmuir United States Surface chemistry 1933 The prize money was with 1/3 allocated to the Main Fund and with 2/3 to the Special Fund of this prize section. 1934 Harold Clayton Urey United States Discovery of heavy hydrogen (deuterium) 1935 Jean Frédéric Joliot
Iréne Joliot-CurieFrance
FranceSyntheses of new radioactive elements (artificial radioactivity) 1936 Peter J. W. Debye Netherlands, Germany Studied dipole moments and the diffraction of X rays and electron beams by gases 1937 Walter N. Haworth
Paul KarrerGreat Britain
SwitzerlandStudied carbohydrates and vitamin C
Studied carotenoids and flavins and vitamins A and B21938 Richard Kuhn Germany Studied carotenoids and vitamins 1939 Adolf F. J. Butenandt
Leopold RuzickaGermany
SwitzerlandStudies on sexual hormones
Studied polymethylenes and higher terpenes1940 The prize money was with 1/3 allocated to the Main Fund and with 2/3 to the Special Fund of this prize section 1941 The prize money was with 1/3 allocated to the Main Fund and with 2/3 to the Special Fund of this prize section. 1942 The prize money was with 1/3 allocated to the Main Fund and with 2/3 to the Special Fund of this prize section. 1943 Georg de Hevesy Hungary Application of isotopes as indicators in the investigation of chemical processes 1944 Otto Hahn Germany Discovered nuclear fission of atoms 1945 Artturi I. Virtanen Finland Discoveries in the area of agricultural and food chemistry, method of preservation of fodder 1946 James B. Sumner
John H. Northrop
Wendell M. StanleyUnited States
United States
United StatesPrepared enzymes and virus proteins in pure form
Crystallizability of enzymes1947 Sir Robert Robinson Great Britain Studied alkaloids 1948 Arne W. K. Tiselius Sweden Analysis using electrophoresis and adsorption, discoveries concerning serum proteins 1949 William F. Giauque United States Contributions to chemical thermodynamics, properties at extremely low temperatures (adiabatic demagnetization) 1950 Kurt Alder
Otto P. H. DielsGermany
GermanyDeveloped diene synthesis 1951 Edwin M. McMillan
Glenn T. SeaborgUnited States
United StatesDiscoveries in the chemistry of transuranium elements 1952 Archer J. P. Martin
Richard L. M. SyngeGreat Britain
Great BritainInvented distribution chromatography 1953 Hermann Staudinger Germany Discoveries in the area of macromolecular chemistry 1954 Linus C. Pauling United States Studied the nature of the chemical bond (molecular structure of proteins) 1955 Vincent du Vigneaud United States Synthesized a polypeptide hormone 1956 Sir Cyril Norman Hinshelwood
Nikolai N. SemenovGreat Britain
Soviet UnionMechanisms of chemical reactions 1957 Sir Alexander R. Todd Great Britain Studied nucleotides and their coenzymes 1958 Frederick Sanger Great Britain Structure of proteins, especially insulin 1959 Jaroslav Heyrovsky Czech Republic Polarography 1960 Willard F. Libby United States Application of carbon 14 for age determinations (radiocarbon dating) 1961 Melvin Calvin United States Studied the assimilation of carbonic acid by plants (photosynthesis) 1962 John C. Kendrew
Max F. PerutzGreat Britain
Great Britain, AustriaStudied the structures of globulin proteins 1963 Giulio Natta
Karl ZieglerItaly
GermanyChemistry and technology of high polymers 1964 Dorothy Crowfoot-Hodgkin Great Britain Structure determination of biologically important substances by means of X rays 1965 Robert B. Woodward United States Syntheses of natural products 1966 Robert S. Mulliken United States Studied chemical bonds and the electron structure of molecules using the orbital method 1967 Manfred Eigen
Ronald G. W. Norrish
George PorterGermany
Great Britain
Great BritainInvestigated extremely fast chemical reactions 1968 Lars Onsager United States, Norway Studied the thermodynamics of irreversible processes 1969 Derek H. R. Barton
Odd HasselGreat Britain
NorwayDevelopment of the concept of conformation 1970 Luis F. Leloir Argentina Discovery of sugar nucleotides and their role in the biosynthesis of carbohydrates 1971 Gerhard Herzberg Canada Electron structure and geometry of molecules, particularly of free radicals (molecular spectroscopy) 1972 Christian B. Anfinsen
Stanford Moore
William H. SteinUnited States
United States
United StatesStudied ribonuclease (Anfinsen)
Studied the active center of ribonuclease (Moore & Stein)1973 Ernst Otto Fischer
Geoffrey WilkinsonGermany
Great BritainChemistry of metal-organic sandwich compounds 1974 Paul J. Flory United States Physical chemistry of macromolecules 1975 Sir John Cornforth
Vladimir PrelogAustralia - Great Britain
Yugoslavia - SwitzerlandStereochemistry of enzyme catalysis reactions
Studied the stereochemistry of organic molecules and reactions1976 William N. Lipscomb United States Structure of boranes 1977 Ilya Prigogine Belgium Contributions to the thermodynamics of irreversible processes, particularly to the theory of dissipative structures 1978 Peter Mitchell Great Britain Studied biological energy transfer, development of the chemiosmotic theory 1979 Herbert C. Brown
Georg WittigUnited States
GermanyDevelopment of (organic) boron and phosphorous compounds 1980 Paul Berg
Walter Gilbert
Frederick SangerUnited States
United States
Great BritainStudied the biochemistry of nucleic acids, particularly hybrid DNA (technology of gene surgery) (Berg)
Determined base sequences in nucleic acids (Gilbert & Sanger)1981 Kenichi Fukui
Roald HoffmannJapan
United StatesTheories on the progress of chemical reactions (frontier orbital theory) 1982 Aaron Klug South Africa Developed crystallographic methods for the elucidation of biologically important nucleic acid protein complexes 1983 Henry Taube Canada Reaction mechanisms of electron transfer, especially with metal complexes 1984 Robert Bruce Merrifield United States Method for the preparation of peptides and proteins 1985 Herbert A. Hauptman
Jerome KarleUnited States
United StatesDeveloped direct methods for the determination of crystal structures 1986 Dudley R. Herschbach
Yuan T. Lee
John C. PolanyiUnited States
United States
CanadaDynamics of chemical elementary processes 1987 Donald James Cram
Charles J. Pedersen
Jean-Marie LehnUnited States
United States
FranceDevelopment of molecules with structurally specific interaction of high selectivity 1988 Johann Deisenhofer
Robert Huber
Hartmut MichelGermany
Germany
GermanyDetermined the three-dimensional structure of a photosynthetic reaction center 1989 Thomas R. Cech
Sidney AltmanUnited States
United StatesDiscovered the catalytic properties of ribonucleic acid (RNA) 1990 Elias James Corey United States Developed novel methods for the synthesis of complex natural compounds (retrosynthetic analysis) 1991 Richard R. Ernst Switzerland Developed high resolution nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) 1992 Rudolph A. Marcus Canada - United States Theories of electron transfer 1993 Kary B. Mullis
Michael SmithUnited States
Great Britain - CanadaInvention of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
Development of site specific mutagenesis1994 George A. Olah United States Carbocations 1995 Paul Crutzen
Mario Molina
F. Sherwood RowlandNetherlands
Mexico - United States
United StatesWork in atmospheric chemistry, particularly concerning the formation and decomposition of ozone 1996 Harold W. Kroto
Robert F. Curl, Jr.
Richard E. SmalleyGreat Britain
United States
United StatesDiscovered fullerenes 1997 Paul D. Boyer
John E. Walker
Jens C. SkouUnited States
Great Britain
DenmarkElucidated the enzymatic mechanism underlying the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
first discovery of an ion-transporting enzyme, Na+, K+-ATPase1998 Walter Kohn
John A. PopleUnited States
Great BritainDevelopment of the density-functional theory (Kohn)
Development of computational methods in quantum chemistry (GAUSSIAN computer programs) (Pope)1999 Ahmed H. Zewail Egypt - United States Studied the transition states of chemical reactions using femtosecond spectroscopy 2000 Alan J. Heeger
Alan G. MacDiarmid
Hideki ShirakawaUnited States
United States
JapanDiscovered and developed conductive polymers 2001 William S. Knowles
Ryoji Noyori
Karl Barry SharplessUnited States
Japan
United States
Work on chirally catalysed hydrogenation reactions (Knowles & Noyori)
Work on chirally catalysed oxidation reactions (Sharpless)2002 John Bennett Fenn
Koichi Tanaka
Kurt WüthrichUnited States
Japan
SwitzerlandDeveloped soft desorption ionisation methods for mass spectrometric analyses of biological macromolecules (Fenn & Tanaka)
Developed nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy for determining the three-dimensional structure of biological macromolecules in solution (Wüthrich)2003 Peter Agre
Roderick MacKinnonUnited States
United StatesDiscovered water channels for transport of water in cell membranes
Performed structural and mechanistic studies of ion channels in cells2004 Aaron Ciechanover
Avram Hershko
Irwin RoseIsrael
Israel
United StatesDiscovered and elucidated the process of ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation 2005 Yves Chauvin
Robert H. Grubbs
Richard R. SchrockFrance
United States
United StatesDeveloped the metathesis method of organic synthesis, allowing for advances in 'green' chemistry 2006 Roger D. Kornberg United States "for his studies of the molecular basis of eukaryotic transcription" 2007 Gerhard Ertl Germany "for his studies of chemical processes on solid surfaces" 2008 Osamu Shimomura
Martin Chalfie
Roger Y. TsienUnited States "for the discovery and development of the green fluorescent protein, GFP"

