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9/27/2017

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Slides and recording available soon at cen.acs.org This webinar is co-produced with Chemical & Engineering News and ACS Webinars

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Have Questions?

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9/27/2017

Have you discovered the missing element?

http://bit.ly/benefitsACS Find the many benefits of ACS membership! 3

Benefits of ACS Membership Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN) The preeminent weekly news source.

NEW! Free Access to ACS Presentations on Demand® ACS Member only access to over 1,000 presentation recordings from recent ACS meetings and select events.

NEW! ACS Career Navigator Your source for leadership development, professional education, career services, and much more.

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Dive into C&EN’s comprehensive coverage of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry! Interactive Nobel Nominations Database The who‘s who of chemists involved in nominating the first 50 years of chemistry‘s Nobel Prize winners.

Nobel Journeys View our interactive maps showing The important locations in the lives of chemistry‗s laureates. http://cen.acs.org/nobels.html

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Dive into C&EN’s comprehensive coverage of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry!

http://cen.acs.org/nobels.html

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9/27/2017

“Who Will Win the #ChemNobel? Predicting the Next Nobel Laureate(s) in Chemistry”

Carmen Drahl Science writer Washington, D.C.

Omar K. Farha Marie Heffern Assistant Professor Department of Chemistry University of California, Davis

Associate Professor Department of Chemistry Northwestern University

Matt Davenport Associate editor C&EN

Lauren Wolf Executive editor, science C&EN

Slides and recording will be available this week.

http://cen.acs.org 7

This webinar is being co-produced with Chemical & Engineering News

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Who Will Win the #ChemNobel? Predicting the Next Nobel Laureate(s) in Chemistry Share your comments in the webinar question window or tweet at us using the hashtag!

Carmen Drahl Freelance science writer Forbes contributor @carmendrahl

Omar K. Farha

Marie Heffern

Associate professor Assistant professor President, NuMat Technologies C&EN Talented 12 Class of 2017 Associate editor, ACS Appl. Mater. Interface. @marieheffern @OmarFarha5

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9 The capital, invested in safe securities by my executors, shall constitute a fund, the interest on which

annually distributed in the form of prizes to those who, during the preceding year, shall have conferred the greatest benefit to mankind . The said interest shall be divided into five equal parts, which shall be apportioned as follows: … one part to the person who shall have made the most important chemical discovery or improvement… shall be

no consideration whatever shall be given to the nationality of the candidates, but that the most worthy shall receive the prize, whether he be a Scandinavian or not. It is my express wish that in awarding the prizes

–Alfred Bernhard Nobel, 1895 Source: NobelPrize.org

Wikimedia Commons

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Meet the Nobel Chemistry Committee Sara Snogerup Linse Chair Professor of physical chemistry & molecular protein science Lund University

Peter Brzezinski Professor of biochemistry & biophysics Stockholm University

Olof Ramström Claes Gustafsson Professor of medical biochemistry University of Gothenburg

Professor of chemistry (organic chemistry) KTH – Royal Institute of Technology Stockholm

Johan Åqvist

Gunnar von Heijne Secretary

Professor of cell & molecular biology Uppsala University

Professor of theoretical chemistry Stockholm University

Source: Nobel.org/Listed institutions

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The #ChemNobel Nominations Database

http://cen.acs.org/nobel-data.html

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The #ChemNobel Nominations Database

http://cen.acs.org/nobel-data.html

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Don‘t forget to check out C&EN‘s lead-up coverage to this year‘s #ChemNobel

http://cen.acs.org/nobels.html

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Name a chemist who, if they aren‘t named a Nobel winner within the next five years, will be considered officially ―snubbed.‖

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Marie’s #ChemSnub Pick* Harry Gray for his work in the field of inorganic chemistry. ―Whether it is for ligand-field theory, electron transfer in biological systems, launching the area of bioinorganic chemistry—along with Stephan Lippard and Richard Holm—or overall lifetime achievement, Harry Gray's impact in chemistry is clear scientifically and beyond.‖ – Marie Heffern

Caltech

Harry Gray Caltech

*If not selected by 2022

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UT Austin

Omar’s #ChemSnub Pick* For the invention and development of Li-ion batteries.

John B. Goodenough University of Texas at Austin

―His worked and discoveries have changed our lives.‖ -Omar Farha

*If not selected by 2022

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UT Austin

Carmen’s #ChemSnub Pick* For the invention and development of Li-ion batteries.

John B. Goodenough University of Texas at Austin

―Lithium-ion batteries transformed technology…If that's not good enough for the Nobel committee (pun intended), I don't know what is.‖ -Carmen Drahl

*If not selected by 2022

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Lauren’s #ChemSnub Pick Darleane Hoffman Lawrence Berkeley Lab University of California, Berkeley ―Nuclear chemistry doesn‘t get acknowledged much anymore by the Nobels. She did some seriously impressive work and could theoretically still win.‖ -Lauren Wolf

https://twitter.com/ChemistryKit/status/904438309371437056

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Matt’s #ChemSnub Factoid

Based on C&EN‘s award designations, nuclear chemistry has the longest Nobel Prize drought. The field last claimed the award in 1960. For more Nobel trivia, visit http://cen.acs.org/nobels.html

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Audience Survey Question ANSWER THE QUESTION ON BLUE SCREEN IN ONE MOMENT

Which #ChemSnub pick do you agree with most? •

John B. Goodenough for his work on lithium-ion batteries



Harry Gray for [pick your favorite contribution to chemistry]



Darleane Hoffman for contributions to nuclear chemistry

Vote and then share your own answer with us in the webinar chat or on Twitter with the #ChemNobel & #ChemSnub hashtags!

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So who won‘t be snubbed? Put another way, who will win this year‘s Nobel Prize in Chemistry?

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Carmen‘s 2017 #ChemNobel Pick Krzysztof Matyjaszewski Carnegie Mellon

Carnegie Mellon

Ezio Rizzardo CSIRO

CSIRO

For advancing radical polymerization technology. David Solomon University of Melbourne

―This trio ticks all my boxes–it's definitely chemistry, there are applications that everyday folks would recognize. ‖ -Carmen Drahl

University of Melbourne

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Omar‘s 2017 #ChemNobel Pick UT Austin

Wikimedia Commons

John B. Goodenough University of Texas at Austin For the discovery and advancement of Li-ion batteries

Omar M. Yaghi University of California, Berkeley For his seminal work on the design and synthesis of new class of porous materials, metal-organic frameworks

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Bertozzi Group/Stanford University

Marie‘s 2017 #ChemNobel Pick

Carolyn R. Bertozzi Stanford University For bioorthogonal chemistry ―The development of bioorthogonal chemistry has introduced new approaches to a wide range of high-impact areas including drug discovery, imaging, and proteomics.‖ –Marie Heffern

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Stanley Whittingham Binghamton University

Asahi Kasei Corp.

Binghamton University

UT Austin

Lauren‘s personal 2017 #ChemNobel Pick

John B. Goodenough University of Texas at Austin

Akira Yoshino Asahi Kasei Corp. LIBTEC

For the invention and development of Li-ion batteries

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Max Planck Institute

Yale University

Lauren‘s official* 2017 #ChemNobel Pick

Arthur L. Horwich Yale University

Franz-Ulrich Hartl Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry

For discovering chaperone proteins guide protein folding. ―Given what we‘re learning about neurodegenerative and other diseases, protein folding is more important than ever. And it‘s a fundamental discovery that still hasn‘t been recognized.‖ –Lauren Wolf *The one that counts for bragging rights

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Matt‘s 2017 #ChemNobel Pick

UC Berkeley

Zhang/Twitter

Doudna Lab

Charpentier/Wikimedia Commons

Jennifer Doudna, Emmanuelle Charpentier, and Feng Zhang for CRISPR/Cas9

Max Planck Institute For Infection Biology

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

―It‘s been a minute since we had a more biological prize.‖ –Matt Davenport

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Audience Survey Question ANSWER THE QUESTION ON BLUE SCREEN IN ONE MOMENT

In your opinion, who will win the next Nobel Prize in Chemistry? •

• • • •

Matyjaszewski, Rizzardo, & Solomon for pioneering work in polymers Goodenough for Li-ion batteries and Yaghi for MOFs Bertozzi for bioorthagonal chemistry Horwich and Hartl for their work on chaperone proteins Doudna, Charpentier, and Zheng for CRISPR/Cas9

Vote for which one of these you think is most likely to claim the Nobel, then share your own picks in the chat box or on Twitter with the #ChemNobel hashtag.

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Many chemists were pleasantly surprised when molecular machines claimed last year‘s #ChemNobel. Here’s the surprise: Although the work showcased some killer chemistry, it doesn‘t yet have a killer app that some spectators have come to expect of Nobel Prize winners. What’s the next area of chemistry that might earn this distinction, winning for its merits as a chemical discovery and furthering fundamental science?

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Marie‘s Answer

Paul W. K. Rothemund

DNA nanostructures

DNA origami

―Very cool structures with interesting properties have been developed, but I think that the hammer is still looking for a nail.‖ –Marie Heffern

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Omar‘s Answer Pioneering work in bioinorganic chemistry by Richard Holm

Harvard University

Harry Gray

Caltech

Rick Friedman

Stephen Lippard

Specifically, for contributions to understanding biological processes

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Carmen‘s Answer

Origin-of-life research Scripps/UCSD

Samples from Stanley Miller‘s 1958 experiment

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Carmen‘s Answer

Origin-of-life research Scripps/UCSD

Samples from Stanley Miller‘s 1958 experiment Plus a shout out to the 1989 #ChemNobel, which Tom Cech and Sidney Altman won for discovering the catalytic properties of RNA.

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Lauren‘s Answer

Nanomotors ACS Nano

―The applications are clearer [than molecular motors]—folks want to use them to deliver cargo in the body. But we‘re so far from being able to do that. If someone makes it happen in a controllable way, that person or persons could win a prize.‖ -Lauren Wolf

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Matt‘s Cockamamie Response

A 1-D carbon allotrope

Sci. Adv.

―It‘s kind of like chemistry‘s magnetic monopole. Discovering one—and getting everyone to agree that it is one—would be such a big deal, I don‘t think it would even have to do anything practical.‖ -Matt Davenport

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Audience Survey Question ANSWER THE QUESTION ON BLUE SCREEN IN ONE MOMENT

Which area of research is most deserving of a #ChemNobel, even without a killer app (yet)? • • • • •

DNA nanostructures Bioinorganic pioneering Origin-of-life research Nanomotors Carbyne (if it’s discovered)

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“Who Will Win the #ChemNobel? Predicting the Next Nobel Laureate(s) in Chemistry”

Carmen Drahl Science writer Washington, D.C.

Omar K. Farha Marie Heffern Assistant Professor Department of Chemistry University of California, Davis

Associate Professor Department of Chemistry Northwestern University

Matt Davenport Associate editor C&EN

Lauren Wolf Executive editor, science C&EN

Slides and recording will be available this week.

http://cen.acs.org This webinar is being co-produced with Chemical & Engineering News

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youtube.com/acswebinars

Search for “acswebinars” and connect! 38

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9/27/2017

Benefits of ACS Membership Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN) The preeminent weekly news source.

NEW! Free Access to ACS Presentations on Demand® ACS Member only access to over 1,000 presentation recordings from recent ACS meetings and select events.

NEW! ACS Career Navigator Your source for leadership development, professional education, career services, and much more.

http://bit.ly/benefitsACS

39

Dive into C&EN’s comprehensive coverage of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry! Interactive Nobel Nominations Database The who‘s who of chemists involved in nominating the first 50 years of chemistry‘s Nobel Prize winners.

Nobel Journeys View our interactive maps showing The important locations in the lives of chemistry‗s laureates.

http://cen.acs.org/nobels.html

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