Professor
Robert H. Grubbs
Robert H. Grubbs is a Victor
and Elizabeth Atkins Professor of Chemistry
at California Institute of Technology. Grubbs
studied Chemistry at the University of Florida,
Gainesville (B.S. and M.S.) and Columbia University,
New York, where he obtained his Ph.D. under
Ronald Breslow in 1968.
His main interests in organometallic chemistry
and synthetic chemistry are catalysts, notably
Grubbs' Catalyst for olefin metathesis and
ring-opening metathesis polymerization with
cyclic olefins such as norbornene. He also
contributed to the development of so-called
"living polymerization".
Grubbs's many awards include: Alfred P. Sloan
Fellow (1974-76), Camille and Henry Dreyfus
Teacher-Scholar Award (1975-78), Alexander
von Humboldt Fellowship (1975), ACS National
Award in Organometallic Chemistry (1988),
Arthur C. Cope Scholar (1990), ACS Award in
polymer Chemistry (1995), Nagoya Medal of
Organic Chemistry (1997), Fluka Reagent of
the Year (1998), Mack Memorial Award (1999),
Benjamin Franklin Medal in Chemistry (2000),
ACS Herman F. Mark Polymer Chemistry Award
(2000), ACS Herbert C. Brown Award for Creative
Research in Synthetic Methods (2001) and the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry (2005). He was elected
to the National Academy of Sciences in 1989
and a fellowship in the American Academy of
Arts and Sciences in 1994.
Grubbs received the 2005 Nobel Prize in Chemistry,
along with Richard R. Schrock and Yves Chauvin,
for his work in the field of olefin metathesis.
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