Open Access
Subscription Access
2016 Nobel Prize in Chemistry:Conferring Molecular Machines as Engines of Creativity
The 2016 Nobel Prize in Chemistry is conferred on three organic chemists, Jean- Pierre Sauvage, J. F. Stoddart and Ben Feringa, who share the Prize for spear heading a new area of chemistry that converges the ideas of molecular synthesis with the principles operating in materials and biology. The trio has contributed immensely in the past 2-3 decades to establish a new direction that relies on exploiting the forces, in the form of chemical energy, in order to conduct a work at the expense of the energy, and the work being conducted at the molecular level, the tiniest possible machine measuring few nanometers in a length scale.
User
Font Size
Information
- Dietrich-Buchecker, C. O., Sauvage, J. P. and Kern, J. M., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1984, 106, 3043–3045.
- Amabilino, D. B., Ashton, P. R., Reder, A. S., Spencer, N. and Stoddart, J. F., Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl., 1994, 33, 1286–1290.
- Ashton, P. R. et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1996, 118, 4931–4951.
- Koumura, N., Zijlstra, R. W. J., van Delden, R. A., Harada, N. and Feringa, B. L., Nature, 1999, 401, 152–155.
- Vicario, J., Katsonis, N., Ramon, B. S., Bastiaansen, C. W. M., Broer, D. J. and Feringa, B. L., Nature, 2006, 440, 163.
- Green, J. E. et al., Nature, 2007, 445, 414–417.
Abstract Views: 623
PDF Views: 152