According to the Mehr correspondent, Susomokitagawa of the University of Kyoto Japan, Richard Uzbeh of Melbourne University of Australia and Omar Omar of the University of California Berkeley were named Nobel Chemistry winners.
The award is awarded for the development of metal-alleged frameworks (MOFS).
Susomo Kitagawa is born in Japanese, a Japanese chemist who works in the field of coordination chemistry. His special focus is on chemistry of organic-mineral hybrid compounds as well as the chemical and physical properties of porous coordination polymers, and especially MOFS.
Richard Uzbeh is born in Yorkshire, England, who has published more than 5 articles so far and specializes in the coordination of polymers, especially organic metal frameworks. He is described as “pioneer in crystal engineering including intermediate metals”.
Omar is a 5 -year -old born in Jordan, who has a professor at the University of California Berkeley. He is also a scholar at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the founder of the Berkeley World Science Institute and a member of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States, as well as the German National Academy of Sciences (Leopolds). In recent years, his name has been one of the options for Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
According to the Nobel website, the winners of the award in the field of chemistry invented molecular structures with large spaces that gases and other chemicals could pass. These organic structures or steel frames can be used to harvest water from the desert air, absorb carbon dioxide and store toxic gases or to catalyze chemical reactions.
With the introduction of today’s winners, the Nobel Scientific Awards Season ended.
(tagstotranslate) Scientific Research (T) Chemical Science (T) Nobel Prize (T) Innovation
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