15 October 1979
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to
award the 1979 Nobel Prize in Chemistry jointly to
Professor Herbert C Brown, Purdue University, West
Lafayette, Indiana, USA and
Professor Georg Wittig, University of Heidelberg, Federal
Republic of Germany
for their development of the use of boron- and
phosphorus-containing compounds, respectively, into important
reagents in organic synthesis.
In contrast to most other natural sciences
chemistry is not exclusively restricted to the study of Nature
per se. Chemists can combine atoms into substances which
do not exist in Nature. This is particularly true for organic
chemistry, the chemistry of carbon compounds, where the
possibilities for preparing new compounds are virtually
unlimited. These possibilities have stimulated the development of
chemistry and the practical consequences have been
enormous.
The chemist soon learned to make dye stuffs which were both
cheaper and better than naturally occurring dyes. Chemical
explosives such as nitroglycerine were developed and their
connection with the Nobel Prize is well known. Synthetic drugs
have saved innumerable lives and spared mankind a great deal of
suffering. The synthesis of vitamins and essential amino acids,
used as food additives, have improved our diet, especially in
developing countries. Plastics, which are a part of our daily
lives, are products of organic synthesis on a large scale.
Chemicals for controlling microorganisms, insects and weeds have
saved millions of lives and reduced starvation. Many such
substances, however, have long-lasting effects which cannot be
accepted and chemists and biologists are trying to develop better
preparations.
Access to efficient synthetic reactions has been a prerequisite
for these developments and new synthetic methods have been
developed during tile past 150 years. Some of these nethods have
had such an impact that their originators have been awarded the
Nobel Prize.
Boron compounds
Herbert C Brown, who is professor at Purdue University, has
developed new reagents containing boron. He jokes about his
initials H, C, and B, which are also the chemical symbols for
hydrogen carbon, and boron, the elements contained in the
compounds which he studies. One of his reagents is sodium
boro-hydride, which has become the reagent of choice for
reduction of carbonyl compounds (Fig 1). He has also modified the
boro-hydrides into reagents for highly selective chemical
transformations.
In addition Brown has introduced an entirely new class of
compounds, the organoboranes, obtained by reacting diborane with
olefins (Fig 2).
Thanks to the work of Brown and his coworkers, the organoboranes
have become the most versatile reagents ever created in organic
chemistry. They can be used for reductions, rearrangements and
additions and have opened up a range of new possibilities for
linking carbon atoms to each other.
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The Wittig reaction
Georg Wittig has been professor in Freiburg, Tübingen and
Heidelberg, and is now professor emeritus. He has developed new
synthetic methods of considerable importance and has studied
reaction mechanisms. His most important achievement is the
discovery of the rearrangement reaction which bears his name. In
the Wittig reaction (Fig 3) an organic phosphorus compound with a
formal double bond between phosphorus and carbon is reacted with
a carbonyl compound. The oxygen of the carbonyl compound is
exchanged for carbon, the product being an olefin. This method of
making olefins has opened up new possibilities, not the least of
which are for the synthesis of biologically active substances
containing carbon-to-carbon double bonds. For example, vitamin A
is synthesized industrially using the Wittig reaction.
Brown's and Wittig's results have opened up new vistas in organic
synthesis and highly stimulated the further development of their
science. Their methods were rapidly introduced not only into
chemical laboratories, but also into elementary text books and
laboratory courses.