Presentation Speech by Professor G. Hägg, member of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses,
Ladies and Gentlemen.
When, in the early nineteenth century, Dalton had produced
experimental proofs that matter consists of atoms it was not long
before an explanation was sought of the forces that bind the
atoms together. Berzelius was of the opinion that this chemical
bond was caused by electrostatic attraction between the atoms;
according to this belief, a bond was established between two
atoms if one of the atoms was positively, and the other
negatively charged. In 1819 when Berzelius presented his theory
he could apply it almost exclusively to inorganic substances;
only few organic substances were known as pure compounds, and the
study of these was difficult due to their complicated and often
insufficiently known composition. Berzelius, however, contrived
to explain, with the help of the new theory, the bond conditions
for a great number of inorganic substances, and could in this wav
contribute in a high degree to a greater clarity in this
field.
Even in inorganic chemistry, however, certain difficulties arose.
How should one explain, for instance, how two hydrogen atoms
unite to become a hydrogen molecule? In order to obtain
attraction between atoms, one of the atoms must be positive and
the other negative; but why should two atoms of the same kind
possess charges with opposite sign? And when the knowledge of
organic compounds increased, new difficulties arose. Berzelius,
for example, found it necessary to assume that the hydrogen atom
was always positive and the chlorine atom always negative. Now it
was also found that in organic molecules a hydrogen atom could
often be exchanged for a chlorine atom, which should be
impossible if one was positive and the other negative.
With increased knowledge, problems that could not be explained by
Berzelius' theory became more and more numerous, and the theory
became discredited.
After the atomic theory had been accepted, it soon became
apparent that another important object in the field of chemistry
must be to determine not only the nature of the chemical bond but
also how the atoms are arranged geometrically when they unite to
form larger groups, such as molecules. Permit me to quote from a
book, remarkable in its day, Die Chemie der Jetztzeit
written in 1869 by the Swedish chemist Blomstrand:
"It is the important task of the chemist to imitate faithfully in
his own way the elaborate constructions which we call chemical
compounds, and in the erection of which the atoms have served as
building stones, to determine as to number and relative position
the points of attack at which one or the other of the atoms
attaches itself to the other, in short, to determine the
distribution in space of the atoms."
Blomstrand makes it the aim, therefore, to find the geometrical
construction of substances, or what is nowadays called their
structure.
At the end of the last century it became obvious that one had to
consider several different kinds of chemical bond. Thus, the
difficulties of the Berzelius theory were also explained.
Berzelius' interpretation was in principle correct as regards a
very important type of bond, but he had made the mistake of
applying it also to bonds of a different type. After Bohr had introduced his
atomic theory one could moreover with its help give a fairly
satisfactory explanation of the Berzelius bond. As this bond
occurs between electrically charged atoms, so-called ions, this
bond type has often been called the ionic bond. The most typical
ionic bonds unite the atoms in the crystals of simple
salts.
The bond which above all others had prevented a general
application of the Berzelius theory is now commonly known as the
covalent bond. It occurs commonly when atoms unite to form a
molecule and was once characterized by the famous American
chemist Gilbert Newton Lewis as "the chemical bond". The
bond between the two hydrogen atoms in a hydrogen molecule,
which, as was said before, could not be explained by Berzelius'
theory, is covalent.
For a long time it was difficult to explain the nature of the
covalent bond. Lewis, however, succeeded in 1916 in showing that
it is brought about by electrons - generally two - which are
shared in common by two neighbouring atoms, thereby uniting them.
Eleven years later Heitler and London were able to give a
quantum-mechanical explanation of the phenomenon. An exact
mathematical treatment of the covalent bond, however, was
possible only in the simple case where only one electron unites
the two atoms, and when these do not contain additional electrons
outside the atomic nuclei. Even for the hydrogen molecule, which
contains two electrons, the treatment cannot be absolutely exact,
and in still more complicated cases the mathematical difficulties
increase rapidly. It has, therefore, been necessary to use
approximate methods, and the results depend to a large extent on
the choice of suitable methods and the manner of their
application.
Linus Pauling has actively contributed towards the development of
these methods, and he has applied them with extreme skill. The
results have been such as to be easily usable by chemists.
Pauling has also eagerly sought to apply his views to a number of
structures which have been experimentally determined during the
last decades, both in his own laboratory in Pasadena and
elsewhere. It is hardly necessary to mention that we have
nowadays great possibilities of reaching Blomstrand's objective
of determining the distribution of atoms in space. This is
principally done by methods of X-ray crystallography involving an
examination of how a crystal influences X-rays in certain
respects, and then out of the effect seeking to determine how the
atoms are placed in the crystal. Pauling's methods have been very
successful and have led to observations which have further
advanced the theoretical treatment.
But if the structure of a substance is too complicated it may
become impossible to make a more direct determination of the
structure with X-rays. In such cases it may be possible, from a
knowledge of bond types, atomic distances and bond directions, to
predict the structure and then examine whether the prediction is
supported by the experiments. Pauling has tried this method in
his studies of the structure of proteins with which he has been
occupied during recent years. To make a direct determination of
the structure of a protein by X-ray methods is out of the
question for the present, owing to the enormous number of atoms
in the molecule. A molecule of the coloured blood constituent
hemoglobin, which is a protein, contains for example more than
8,000 atoms.
In the late nineteen thirties Pauling and his colleagues had
already begun to determine with X-rays the structure of amino
acids and dipeptides, that is to say, compounds of relatively
simple structure containing what may be called fragments of
proteins. From this were obtained valuable information - about
atomic distances and bond directions. These values were
supplemented by the determination of the probable limits of
variation for distances and directions.
On this basis Pauling deduced some possible structures of the
fundamental units in proteins, and the problem was then to
examine whether these could explain the X-ray data obtained. It
has thus become apparent that one of these structures, the
so-called alpha-helix, probably exists in several proteins.
How far Pauling is right in detail still remains to be proved,
but he has surely found an important principle in the structure
of proteins. His method is sure to prove most productive in
continued studies.
It is hardly necessary to question the practical use of the
knowledge of the nature of chemical bonds and of the structure of
substances. It is obvious that the properties of a substance must
largely depend on the strength with which its atoms are united
and the nature of the resulting structure. This I does not only
apply to the physical properties of the substance, for instance
hardness and melting point, but also to its chemical properties,
that is to say how it participates in chemical reactions. If we
know how certain atoms or groups of atoms are placed in a
molecule we can often predict how the molecule should react under
given conditions. And as every reaction results in the breaking
of some bonds and the formation of others the result will largely
depend on the relative strength of the different bonds.
Professor Pauling. Since you began your
scientific career more than thirty years ago you have covered a
diversity of subjects ranging over wide fields of chemistry,
physics, and even medicine. It has been said of you that you have
chosen to live "on the frontiers of science" and we chemists are
keenly aware of the influence and the stimulative effect of your
pioneer work.
Wide though your field of activity may be, you have devoted the
greater part of your energy to the study of the nature of the
chemical bond and the determination of the structure of molecules
and crystals.
It is with great satisfaction, therefore, that the Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences has decided to award to you this year's Nobel
Prize for Chemistry for your brilliant achievements in this
fundamental field of chemistry.
On behalf of the Academy I wish to extend to you our heartiest
congratulations, and now ask you to receive from the hands of His
Majesty the King, the Nobel Prize for Chemistry for the year
1954.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1954