Presentation Speech by Professor Arne Fredga, member of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
One of the fundamental conditions for life on Earth is the
ability of carbon atoms to bind each other to a practically
unlimited extent. They form chains, often very branched, but also
rings and net-works. The number of carbon compounds is thus very
large - some years ago I saw the number two million - and many
new ones are discovered or prepared every day. It is obvious that
a multitude of different substances are required to build up a
living organism and make it function.
The structure of carbon compounds, often called organic
compounds, is, however, governed by rather simple principles. To
describe an organic molecule, we have first the
constitution, which can be said to represent the
ground-plan. Next we have the configuration, which deals
with the question of right or left. In the case of unsymmetrical
objects like gloves or shoes there must exist a right form and a
left form and the same is true for unsymmetrical molecules. What
is then the conformation, which is of interest here
to-day?
A molecule is not, in general rigid. There is a certain
flexibility, which may, perhaps, be called limpness or
floppyness. Certain distances and angles are invariable and the
chain must not be broken, but it may bend, turn or twist in
different ways. In ring-shaped molecules, the flexibility is more
restricted. Small rings of three, four of five atoms are rather
rigid and planar. Six carbon atoms permit a certain flexibility
and large rings may be rather floppy. Complicated molecules with
net-works of several rings are often more rigid. The rings check
or lock each other. The conformation is the shape, which the
molecule really assumes, utilizing the flexibility. It may be
said that conformational analysis deals with the mode of
behaviour of floppy molecules.
Metaphorically one could say that the molecule tries to arrange
itself in the most comfortable way. It will avoid crowding and
strain and must consider that certain groups may attract or repel
each other.
Often a great number of conformations are possible, but some are
more stable than others. These are statistically favoured. A ring
of six carbon atoms can have two conformations, known as the
chair and boat forms, which easily interchange. At room
temperature, a molecule changes its conformation about a million
times in a second. One of the conformations is, however, strongly
predominant (about 99%). Professor Hassel has carried out
fundamental investigations on this system and shown how heavy or
bulky groups, attached to the carbon atoms, take up their
positions relative to the ring and to each other.
The conformation is of great importance for the mode of reaction
of the molecules. Reactive groups may be easily accessible, or
they may also be more or less blocked by other groups. Knowledge
of the conformation is therefore of great importance for
explaining or predicting the mode of reaction of a certain
molecule. It is always a good thing to know if an experiment has
any chance of success.
Geometry in three dimensions is not very popular. I suppose that
no one will mind if I refrain from discussing special cases in
detail and from describing the physico-chemical methods used in
conformational analysis.
In the development of scientific ideas it is generally possible
to trace contributions, elements of thought, from many sides. But
often the decisive advances, the intellectual syntheses from
different thoughts and suggestions can be attributed to one or
two scientists, who stand out from the others. Professor Hassel's
elegant work on six-membered rings, carried out with ever
increasing precision, has laid a solid foundation for a dynamic
chemistry in three dimensions. Professor Barton has generalized,
opening wider perspectives and deducing the consequences for many
complicated ring systems, which play an important role in living
nature. Let me only mention the ring system of the steroids,
which is found in the bile acids, necessary for digestion, in sex
hormones, cortisone, digitalis glycosides and cholesterol but
also in the lather-forming saponins and in the special venoms of
potato-tops and toads.
Professor Barton. In the classical work
"The Conformation of the Steroid Nucleus" you have advanced the
leading principles of conformational analysis. In this paper you
have also drawn attention to the notable researches of Hassel,
which have thrown considerable light on these more subtle aspects
of stereochemistry. Your ideas were soon accepted and they play a
fundamental role in organic chemistry of today. According to a
prominent fellow scientist, your paper represents the first real
advance in stereochemistry since the theory of Van 't Hoffand Le
Bel, i.e. since 1874. I have no objections.
In recognition of your services to Chemical Science, the Royal
Academy has decided to confer upon you the Nobel Prize. To me has
been granted the privilege of conveying to you the most hearty
congratulations of the Academy.
Professor Hassel. Not very long ago, organic chemists spoke of free rotation. Gradually they found that the rotation is restricted and that this fact is important. Many workers have contributed to the development, but in our opinion your work on the cyclohexane system is of outstanding importance. In your work on decaline, you have also taken the important step to polycyclic systems and pointed the way for coming development. In recognition of your services to Chemical Science, the Royal Academy has decided to confer upon you the Nobel Prize. To me has been granted the privilege of conveying to you the most hearty congratulations of the Academy.
Professor Barton. On behalf of the Academy I invite you to receive your prize from the hands of His Majesty the King.
Professor Hassel. On behalf of the Academy I invite you to receive your prize from the hands of His Majesty the King.
From Les Prix Nobel en 1969, Editor Wilhelm Odelberg, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1970
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1969