Nobel Prize for Chemistry
For years not listed, no award was made.
|
1901 |
Jacobus H. van't Hoff (Netherlands), for laws of chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure in solutions |
|
1902 |
Emil Fischer (Germany), for experiments in sugar and purin groups of substances |
|
1903 |
Svante A. Arrhenius (Sweden), for his electrolytic theory of dissociation |
|
1904 |
Sir William Ramsay (U.K.), for discovery and determination of place of inert gaseous elements in air |
|
1905 |
Adolf von Baeyer (Germany), for work on organic dyes and hydroaromatic combinations |
|
1906 |
Henri Moissan (France), for isolation of fluorine, and introduction of electric furnace |
|
1907 |
Eduard Buchner (Germany), discovery of cell-less fermentation and investigations in biological chemistry |
|
1908 |
Sir Ernest Rutherford (U.K.), for investigations into disintegration of elements |
|
1909 |
Wilhelm Ostwald (Germany), for work on catalysis and investigations into chemical equilibrium and reaction rates |
|
1910 |
Otto Wallach (Germany), for work in the field of alicyclic compounds |
|
1911 |
Marie Curie (France), for discovery of elements radium and polonium |
|
1912 |
Victor Grignard (France), for reagent discovered by him; and Paul Sabatier (France), for methods of hydrogenating organic compounds |
|
1913 |
Alfred Werner (Switzerland), for linking up atoms within the molecule |
|
1914 |
Theodore W. Richards (U.S.), for determining atomic weight of many chemical elements |
|
1915 |
Richard Willstätter (Germany), for research into coloring matter of plants, especially chlorophyll |
|
1918 |
Fritz Haber (Germany), for synthetic production of ammonia |
|
1920 |
Walther Nernst (Germany), for work in thermochemistry |
|
1921 |
Frederick Soddy (U.K.), for investigations into origin and nature of isotopes |
|
1922 |
Francis W. Aston (U.K.), for discovery of isotopes in nonradioactive elements and for discovery of the whole number rule |
|
1923 |
Fritz Pregl (Austria), for method of microanalysis of organic substances discovered by him |
|
1925 |
In1926, the1925 prize was awarded to Richard Zsigmondy (Germany), for work on the heterogeneous nature of colloid solutions |
|
1926 |
Theodor Svedberg (Sweden), for work on disperse systems |
|
1927 |
In1928, the1927 prize was awarded to Heinrich Wieland (Germany), for investigations of bile acids and kindred substances |
|
1928 |
Adolf Windaus (Germany), for investigations on constitution of the sterols and their connection with vitamins |
|
1929 |
Sir Arthur Harden (U.K.) and Hans K. A. S. von Euler-Chelpin (Sweden), for research of fermentation of sugars |
|
1930 |
Hans Fischer (Germany), for work on coloring matter of blood and leaves and for his synthesis of hemin |
|
1931 |
Karl Bosch and Friedrich Bergius (both Germany), for invention and development of chemical high-pressure methods |
|
1932 |
Irving Langmuir (U.S.), for work in realm of surface chemistry |
|
1934 |
Harold C. Urey (U.S.), for discovery of heavy hydrogen |
|
1935 |
Frédéric and Irène Joliot-Curie (both France), for synthesis of new radioactive elements |
|
1936 |
Peter J. W. Debye (Netherlands), for investigations on dipole moments and diffraction of X-rays and electrons in gases |
|
1937 |
Walter N. Haworth (U.K.), for research on carbohydrates and vitamin C; and Paul Karrer (Switzerland), for work on carotenoids, flavins, and vitamins A and B |
|
1938 |
Richard Kuhn (Germany), for carotenoid study and vitamin research (declined) |
|
1939 |
Adolf Butenandt (Germany), for work on sexual hormones (declined the prize); and Leopold Ruzicka (Switzerland), for work with polymethylenes |
|
1943 |
Georg Hevesy De Heves (Hungary), for work on use of isotopes as indicators |
|
1944 |
Otto Hahn (Germany), for work on atomic fission |
|
1945 |
Artturi Illmari Virtanen (Finland), for research in the field of conservation of fodder |
|
1946 |
James B. Sumner (U.S.), for crystallizing enzymes; John H. Northrop and Wendell M. Stanley (both U.S.), for preparing enzymes and virus proteins in pure form |
|
1947 |
Sir Robert Robinson (U.K.), for research in plant substances |
|
1948 |
Arne Tiselius (Sweden), for biochemical discoveries and isolation of mouse paralysis virus |
|
1949 |
William Francis Giauque (U.S.), for research in thermodynamics, especially effects of low temperature |
|
1950 |
Otto Diels and Kurt Alder (both Germany), for discovery of diene synthesis enabling scientists to study structure of organic matter |
|
1951 |
Glenn T. Seaborg and Edwin H. McMillan (both U.S.), for discovery of plutonium |
|
1952 |
Archer John Porter Martin and Richard Laurence Millington Synge (both U.K.), for development of partition chromatography |
|
1953 |
Hermann Staudinger (Germany), for research in giant molecules |
|
1954 |
Linus C. Pauling (U.S.), for study of forces holding together protein and other molecules |
|
1955 |
Vincent du Vigneaud (U.S.), for work on pituitary hormones |
|
1956 |
Sir Cyril Hinshelwood (U.K.) and Nikolai N. Semenov (U.S.S.R.), for parallel research on chemical reaction kinetics |
|
1957 |
Sir Alexander Todd (U.K.), for research with chemical compounds that are factors in heredity |
|
1958 |
Frederick Sanger (U.K.), for determining molecular structure of insulin |
|
1959 |
Jaroslav Heyrovsky (Czechoslovakia), for development of polarography, an electrochemical method of analysis |
|
1960 |
Willard F. Libby (U.S.), for "atomic time clock" to measure age of objects by measuring their radioactivity |
|
1961 |
Melvin Calvin (U.S.), for establishing chemical steps during photosynthesis |
|
1962 |
Max F. Perutz and John C. Kendrew (U.K.), for mapping protein molecules with X-rays |
|
1963 |
Carl Ziegler (Germany) and Giulio Natta (Italy), for work in uniting simple hydrocarbons into large molecule substances |
|
1964 |
Dorothy Mary Crowfoot Hodgkin (U.K.), for determining structure of compounds needed in combatting pernicious anemia |
|
1965 |
Robert B. Woodward (U.S.), for work in synthesizing complicated organic compounds |
|
1966 |
Robert Sanderson Mulliken (U.S.), for research on bond holding atoms together in molecule |
|
1967 |
Manfred Eigen (Germany), Ronald G. W. Norrish, and George Porter (both U.K.), for work in high-speed chemical reactions |
|
1968 |
Lars Onsager (U.S.), for development of system of equations in thermodynamics |
|
1969 |
Derek H. R. Barton (U.K.) and Odd Hassel (Norway), for study of organic molecules |
|
1970 |
Luis F. Leloir (Argentina), for discovery of sugar nucleotides and their role in biosynthesis of carbohydrates |
|
1971 |
Gerhard Herzberg (Canada), for contributions to knowledge of electronic structure and geometry of molecules, particularly free radicals |
|
1972 |
Christian Boehmer Anfinsen, Stanford Moore, and William Howard Stein (all U.S.), for pioneering studies in enzymes |
|
1973 |
Ernst Otto Fischer (W. Germany) and Geoffrey Wilkinson (U.K.), for work that could solve problem of automobile exhaust pollution |
|
1974 |
Paul J. Flory (U.S.), for developing analytic methods to study properties and molecular structure of long-chain molecules |
|
1975 |
John W. Cornforth (Australia) and Vladimir Prelog (Switzerland), for research on structure of biological molecules such as antibiotics and cholesterol |
|
1976 |
William N. Lipscomb, Jr. (U.S.), for work on the structure and bonding mechanisms of boranes |
|
1977 |
Ilya Prigogine (Belgium), for contributions to nonequilibrium thermodynamics, particularly the theory of dissipative structures |
|
1978 |
Peter Mitchell (U.K.), for contributions to the understanding of biological energy transfer |
|
1979 |
Herbert C. Brown (U.S.) and Georg Wittig (West Germany), for developing a group of substances that facilitate very difficult chemical reactions |
|
1980 |
Paul Berg, Walter Gilbert (both U.S.), and Frederick Sanger (U.K.), for developing methods to map the structure and function of DNA, the substance that controls the activity of the cell |
|
1981 |
Roald Hoffmann (U.S.) and Kenichi Fukui (Japan), for applying quantum-mechanics theories to predict the course of chemical reactions |
|
1982 |
Aaron Klug (U.K.), for research in the detailed structures of viruses and components of life |
|
1983 |
Henry Taube (U.S.), for research on how electrons transfer between molecules in chemical reactions |
|
1984 |
R. Bruce Merrifield (U.S.), for research that revolutionized the study of proteins |
|
1985 |
Herbert A. Hauptman and Jerome Karle (both U.S.), for their outstanding achievements in the development of direct methods for the determination of crystal structures |
|
1986 |
Dudley R. Herschback, Yuan T. Lee (both U.S.), and John C. Polanyi (Canada), for their work on "reaction dynamics" |
|
1987 |
Donald J. Cram, Charles J. Pedersen (both U.S.), and Jean-Marie Lehn (France), for wide-ranging research that has included the creation of artificial molecules that can mimic vital chemical reactions of the processes of life |
|
1988 |
Johann Deisenhofer, Robert Huber, and Hartmut Michel (all West Germany), for unraveling the structure of proteins that play a crucial role in photosynthesis |
|
1989 |
Thomas R. Cech and Sidney Altman (both U.S.), for their discovery, independently, that RNA could actively aid chemical reactions in the cells |
|
1990 |
Elias James Corey (U.S.), for developing new ways to synthesize complex molecules ordinarily found in nature |
|
1991 |
Richard R. Ernst (Switzerland), for refinements he developed in nuclear magnetic-resonance spectroscopy |
|
1992 |
Rudolph A. Marcus (U.S.), for his mathematical analysis of how the overall energy in a system of interacting molecules changes and induces an electron to jump from one molecule to another |
|
1993 |
Kary B. Mullis (U.S.) and Michael Smith (Canada), for their contributions to the science of genetics |
|
1994 |
George A. Olah (U.S.), University of Southern California in Los Angeles, for research that opened new ways to break apart and rebuild compounds of carbon and hydrogen |
|
1995 |
F. Sherwood Rowland, Mario Molina (both U.S.), and Paul Crutzen (Netherlands), for their pioneering work in explaining the chemical processes that deplete the earth's ozone shield |
|
1996 |
Richard E. Smalley, Robert F. Curl, Jr. (both U.S.), and Harold W. Kroto (U.K.), for discovery of a new class of carbon molecule |
|
1997 |
Paul D. Boyer (U.S.), Jens C. Skou (Denmark), and John E. Walker (U.K.), for discoveries about a molecule that allows the human body to store and transfer energy between cells |
|
1998 |
Walter Kohn (U.S.) and John A. Pople (U.K.), for their developments in the study of the properties of molecules and the chemical processes in which they are involved |