Ryōji Noyori

Ryōji Noyori
Born (1938-09-03) 3 September 1938
Kobe, Japan
Nationality Japan
Fields
Institutions
Alma mater Kyoto University
Doctoral advisor Hitoshi Nozaki
Other academic advisors Elias J. Corey
Notable awards
Website
www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/2001/noyori-facts.html

Ryōji Noyori (野依 良治 Noyori Ryōji, born September 3, 1938) is a Japanese chemist. He won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2001. Noyori shared half of the prize with William S. Knowles for the study of chirally catalyzed hydrogenations; the second half of the prize went to K. Barry Sharpless for his study in chirally catalyzed oxidation reactions (Sharpless epoxidation).[2][3][4][5][6][7][8]

Education and career

Ryōji Noyori was born in Kobe, Japan. He became fascinated with chemistry at age twelve, after hearing a presentation on nylon. He saw the power of chemistry as being the ability to "produce high value from almost nothing". He was a student at Kyoto University, an instructor in the research group of Hitoshi Nozaki, and an associate professor at Nagoya University. After postdoctoral work with Elias J. Corey at Harvard he returned to Nagoya, becoming a full professor in 1972. He is still based at Nagoya, and served as president of RIKEN, a multi-site national research initiative with an annual budget of $800 million, from 2003 to 2015.[9]

Research

Noyori Materials Science Laboratory in Nagoya University
Noyori Conference Hall in Nagoya University
Study with a fresh and straightforward mind!
(in Nagoya University)

Noyori believes strongly in the power of catalysis and of green chemistry; in a recent article he argues for the pursuit of "practical elegance in synthesis".[10] In this article he states that "our ability to devise straightforward and practical chemical syntheses is indispensable to the survival of our species." Elsewhere he has said that "Research is for nations and mankind, not for researchers themselves." He encourages scientists to be politically active: "Researchers must spur public opinions and government policies toward constructing the sustainable society in the 21st century."[11]

Noyori is currently a chairman of the Education Rebuilding Council, which was set up by Japan's PM Shinzō Abe after he came to power in 2006.[12]

Noyori is most famous for asymmetric hydrogenation using as catalysts complexes of rhodium and ruthenium, particularly those based on the BINAP ligand. (See Noyori asymmetric hydrogenation) Asymmetric hydrogenation of an alkene in the presence of ((S)-BINAP)Ru(OAc)2 is used for the commercial production of enantiomerically pure (97% ee) naproxen, used as an anti-inflammatory drug. The antibacterial agent levofloxacin is manufactured by asymmetric hydrogenation of ketones in the presence of a Ru(II) BINAP halide complex.

He has also worked on other asymmetric processes. Each year 3000 tonnes (after new expansion) of menthol are produced (in 94% ee) by Takasago International Corporation, using Noyori's method for isomerisation of allylic amines.[13]

Myrcene Diethylamine Citronellal Zinc bromide MentholMenthol synthesis.png
About this image

More recently with Philip G. Jessop, Nyori has developed an industrial process for the manufacture of N,N-dimethylformamide from hydrogen, dimethylamine and supercritical carbon dioxide in the presence of RuCl2(PMe3)4 as catalyst.[14]

Awards and honours

The Ryoji Noyori Prize is named in his honour. In 2000 Noyori became Honorary Doctor at the University of Rennes 1, where he taught in 1995,[15] and in 2005, he became Honorary Doctor at Technical University of Munich and RWTH Aachen University, Germany. Noyori was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society (ForMemRS) in 2005.[1] He has also been awarded the Asahi Prize in 1992, the Tetrahedron Prize in 1993, the Arthur C. Cope Award in 1997, the Wolf Prize in Chemistry in 2001 and the Lomonosov Gold Medal in 2009.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Fellowship of the Royal Society 1660-2015". Royal Society. Archived from the original on 2015-07-15.
  2. Organic synthesis in Japan : past, present, and future : in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Society of Synthetic Organic Chemistry, Japan / editor in chief, Ryoji Noyori (1992)
  3. Asymmetric catalysis in organic synthesis (1994)
  4. T. J. Colacot. "2001 Nobel Prize in Chemistry". Platinum Metals Review 2002, 46(2), 82–83.
  5. Ryoji Noyori Nobel lecture (2001)
  6. Ryoji Noyori Nobel lecture video (2001)
  7. Autobiography
  8. Biographical snapshots: Ryoji Noyori, Journal of Chemical Education web site.
  9. RIKEN News March 24, 2015 , Nature News March 24, 2015
  10. Noyori, Ryoji (2005). "Pursuing practical elegance in chemical synthesis". Chemical Communications (14): 1807. doi:10.1039/B502713F.
  11. Keynote address, June 23, 2005, at the Second International Conference on Green and Sustainable Chemistry, Washington DC.
  12. Abe panel wants kids in class more, plus harsher discipline | The Japan Times Online. Search.japantimes.co.jp (2007-01-20). Retrieved on 2011-06-27.
  13. Japan: Takasago to Expand L-Menthol Production in Iwata Plant. FlexNews. 10/01/2008
  14. Walter Leitner; Philip G. Jessop (1999). Chemical synthesis using supercritical fluids. Wiley-VCH. pp. 408–. ISBN 978-3-527-29605-7. Retrieved 27 June 2011.
  15. (French) Ryoji Noyori, honorary doctorate awarded Nobel Prize, Rennes1 campus, November–December 2001
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