I was born 1933 in Winterthur,
Switzerland, where our ancestors resided at least since the 15th
century. We lived in a home built in 1898 by my grandfather, a
merchant. My father, Robert Ernst, was teaching as an architect
at the technical high school of our city. I had the great luck to
grow up, together with two sisters, in a town that combined in a
unique way artistic and industrious activities. Invaluable art
collections and a small but first rank symphony orchestra carry
the fame of Winterthur far across the borders of Switzerland. On
the other hand, industries producing heavy machinery, like Diesel
motors and railway engines, provided the commercial basis of
prosperity.
I soon became interested in both sides. Playing the violoncello
brought me into numerous chamber and church music ensembles, and
stimulated my interest in musical composition that I tried
extensively while in high school. At the age of 13, I found in
the attic a case filled with chemicals, remainders of an uncle
who died in 1923 and was, as a metallurgical engineer, interested
in chemistry and photography. I became almost immediately
fascinated by the possibilities of trying out all conceivable
reactions with them, some leading to explosions, others to
unbearable poisoning of the air in our house, frightening my
parents. However, I survived and started to read all chemistry
books that I could get a hand on, first some 19th century books
from our home library that did not provide much reliable
information, and then I emptied the rather extensive city
library. Soon, I knew that I would become a chemist, rather than
a composer. I wanted to understand the secrets behind my chemical
experiments and behind the processes in nature.
Thus, after finishing high school, I started with high
expectations and enthusiasm to study chemistry at the famous
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich (ETH-Z). I was
rapidly disappointed by the state of chemistry in the early
fifties as it was taught at ETH-Z; we students had to memorize
incountable facts that even the professors did not understand. A
good memory not impeccable logic was on demand. The physical
chemistry lectures did not reveal much insight either, they were
limited just to classical thermodynamics. Thus, I had to
continue, similar as in high school, to gain some decent chemical
knowledge by reading. A book from which I learned a lot at that
time was "Theoretical Chemistry" by S. Glasstone. It revealed to
me the fundamentals of quantum mechanics, spectroscopy,
statistical mechanics, and statistical thermodynamics, subjects
that were never even mentioned in lectures, except in a voluntary
and very excellent lecture course given by the young enthusiastic
Professor Hans H.Günthard who had studied chemistry and
physics in parallel.
It was clear to me, after my diploma as a "Diplomierter Ingenieur
Chemiker" and some extensive military service, I had to start a
PhD thesis in the laboratory of Professor Günthard.
Fortunately, he accepted me and associated me with a young most
brilliant scientist Hans Primas, who never went through any
formal studies but nevertheless acquired rapidly whatever he
needed for his work that was then concerned with high resolution
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), a field in its infancy at that
time. Much of his and also my time was spent on designing and
building advanced electronic equipment for improved NMR
spectrometers. In parallel, we developed the theoretical
background for the experiments we had in mind as well as for the
optimum performance of the instruments. Signal-to-noise ratio
calculations and optimizations were daily routine as NMR suffers
from a disappointingly low sensitivity that severely limits its
applications. Hans Primas developed and analyzed field modulation
techniques, constructed a field frequency lock system, and
contributed a new design of shaped pole caps for the
electromagnet that was supposed to deliver an extremely
homogeneous magnetic field. These developments led to two types
of spectrometers that were adopted by Trüb-Täuber, a
Swiss electronics company, and sold all over Europe. Later in
1965, Trüb-Täuber was dissolved, and the NMR
spectroscopy section led to the foundation of Spectrospin AG that
is, together with Bruker Analytische Messtechnik, nowadays the
world leading producer of NMR spectrometers.
My own work dealt with the construction of high sensitivity radio
frequency preamplifiers and in particular high sensitivity probe
assemblies, initially for a 25 MHz, later for a 75 MHz proton
resonance spectrometer. On the theoretical side, I was concerned
with stochastic resonance. The goal set by Hans Primas was the
usage of random noise for the excitation of nuclear magnetic
resonance, following the famous concepts of Norbert Wiener for
the stochastic testing of non-linear systems. The theoretical
treatment was based on a Volterra functional expansion using
orthogonal stochastic polynomials. I tried in particular to
design a scheme of homonuclear broadband decoupling to simplify
proton resonance spectra. By applying a stochastic sequence with
a shaped power spectral density that has a hole at the
observation frequency, all extraneous protons should be decoupled
without perturbing the observed proton spin. The theoretical
diffculties were mainly concerned with the computation of the
response to nonwhite noise. Experiments were not attempted at
that time, we did not believe in the usefulness of the concept
anyway, and I finished my thesis in 1962 with a feeling like an
artist balancing on a high rope without any interested
spectators.
I thus decided to leave the university forever and tried to find
an industrial job in the United States. Among numerous offers, I
decided for Varian Associates in Palo Alto where famous
scientists, like Weston A. Anderson, Ray Freeman, Jim Hyde,
Martin Packard, and Harry Weaver, were working
along similar lines as we in Zürich but with a clear
commercial goal in mind. This attracted my interest, hoping to
find some motivation for my own work. And indeed, I was extremely
lucky. Weston Anderson was on his way to invent Fourier transform
spectroscopy in order to improve the sensitivity of NMR by
parallel data acquisition. After his involvement in the
development of a cute mechanical device, the "wheel of fortune",
to generate and detect several frequencies in parallel, he
proposed to me in 1964 to try a pulse excitation experiment that
indeed led to Fourier transform (FT) NMR as we know it today. The
first successful experiments were done in summer 1964 while
Weston Anderson was abroad on an extensive business trip. In this
work I could take advantage in an optimum way of my knowledge in
system theory gained during my studies with Primas and
Günthard. The response to our invention was however meager.
The paper that described our achievements was rejected twice by
the Journal of Chemical Physics to be finally accepted and
published in the Review of Scientific Instruments. Varian also
resisted to build a spectrometer that incorporated the novel
Fourier transform concept. It took many years before in the
competitive company Bruker Analytische Messtechnik Tony Keller
and his coworkers demonstrated in 1969 for the first time a
commercial FT NMR spectrometer to the great amazement of Varian
that had the patent rights on the invention.
Still at Varian, I was further extending my earlier work on
stochastic resonance with the introduction of heteronuclear
broadband decoupling by noise irradiation, the "noise decoupling"
that led to a rapid development in carbon-13 spectroscopy. It has
been replaced later by the much more effcient multiple pulse
schemes of Malcolm H. Levitt and Ray Freeman using composite
pulses.
Of major importance for the success of more advanced experiments
and measurement techniques in NMR was the availability of small
laboratory computers that could be hooked up directly to the
spectrometer. During my last years at Varian (1966-68), we
developed numerous computer applications in spectroscopy for
automated experiments and improved data processing.
In 1968 I returned, after an extensive trip through Asia, to
Switzerland. A brief visit to Nepal started my insatiable love
for Asian art. My main interest is directed towards Tibetan
scroll paintings, the so-called thangkas, a unique and most
exciting form of religious art with its own strict rules and
nevertheless incorporating an incredible exuberance of
creativity.
Back in Switzerland, I had a chance to take over the lead of the
NMR research group at the Laboratorium für Physikalische
Chemie of ETH-Z after Professor Primas turned his interests more
towards theoretical chemistry. Despite an initial lack of
suitable instrumentation, I continued to work on methodological
improvements of time-domain NMR with repetitive pulse experiments
and Fourier double resonance. In addition, we performed the first
pulsed time-domain chemically-induced dynamic nuclear
polarization (CIDNP) experiments. We developed at that time also
stochastic resonance as an alternative to pulse FT spectroscopy
employing binary pseudo-random noise sequences for broadband
excitation, correlating input and output noise. Similar work was
done simultaneously by Prof. Reinhold Kaiser at the University of
New Brunswick.
The next fortunate event occurred in 1971 when my first graduate
student, Thomas Baumann, visited the Ampere Summer School in
Basko Polje, Yugoslavia, where Professor Jean Jeener proposed a
simple two-pulse sequence that produces, after two-dimensional
Fourier transformation, a two-dimensional (2D) spectrum. In the
course of time, we recognized the importance and universality of
his proposal. In my group, Enrico Bartholdi performed at first
some analytical calculations to explore the features of 2D
experiments. Finally in the summer of 1974, we tried our first
experiments in desperate need of results to be presented at the
VIth International Conference on Magnetic Resonance in Biological
Systems, Kandersteg, 1974.
At the same time, it occurred to me that the 2D spectroscopy
principle could also be applied to NMR imaging, previously
proposed by Paul
Lauterbur. This led then to the invention of Fourier imaging
on which the at present most frequently used spin-warp imaging
technique relies. First experiments were done by Anil Kumar and
Dieter Welti.
From then on, the development of multi-dimensional spectroscopy
went very fast, inside and outside of our research group. Prof.
John S. Waugh extended it for applications to solid state
resonance, and the research group of Prof. Ray Freeman,
particularly Geoffrey Bodenhausen, contributed some of the first
heteronuclear experiments. We started 1976 an intense
collaboration, lasting for 10 years, with Professor Kurt
Wüthrich of ETH-Z to develop applications of 2D spectroscopy
in molecular biology. He and his research group have been
responsible for most essential innovations that enabled the
determination of the three-dimensional structure of biomolecules
in solution.
During the following years, a large number of ingenious
coworkers, in particular Geoffrey Bodenhausen, Lukas
Braunschweiler, Christian Griesinger, Anil Kumar, Malcolm H.
Levitt, Slobodan Macura, Luciano Müller, Ole W.
Sørensen, and Alexander Wokaun, contributed numerous
modifications of the basic 2D spectroscopy concept, such as
relay-type coherence transfer, multiple quantum filtering,
multiple quantum spectroscopy, total correlation spectroscopy,
exclusive correlation spectroscopy, accordion spectroscopy, spy
experiments, three-dimensional spectroscopy, and many more. In
parallel, numerous other research groups contributed an even
larger number of innovative methods.
Besides these activities in high resolution NMR, we always had a
research program in solid state NMR going aiming at
methodological developments, such as improved 2D spectroscopy
techniques and spin diffusion, and applications to particular
systems such as one-dimensional organic conductors, polymer
blends, and dynamics in hydrogen-bonded carboxylic acids in
collaboration with Thomas Baumann, Pablo Caravatti, Federico
Graf, Max Linder, Beat H.Meier, Rolf Meyer, Thierry Schaffhauser,
Armin Stöckli, and Dieter Suter.
More recently, I had also the pleasure to closely collaborate
with Prof. Arthur Schweiger, an extremely innovative EPR
spectroscopist, in the development of pulsed EPR and ENDOR
techniques. This turned out to be a specially challenging field
due to the inherent experimental diffficulties and the many ways
to overcome the problems.
In recent years, more and more of my time has become absorbed by
administrative work for the research council of ETH-Z of which I
am presently the president. I recognized that teaching and
research institutions vitally depend on the involvement of active
scientists also in management functions.
Looking back, I realize that I have been favored extraordinarily
by external circumstances, the proper place at the proper time in
terms of my PhD thesis, my first employment in the USA, hearing
about Jean Jeener's idea, and in particular having had incredibly
brilliant coworkers. At last, I am extremely grateful for the
encouragement and for the occasional readjustment of my standards
of value by my wife Magdalena who stayed with me so far for more
than 28 years despite all the problems of being married to a
selfish work-addict with an unpredictable temper. Magdalena has,
without much input from my side, educated our three children:
Anna Magdalena (kindergarden teacher), Katharina Elisabeth
(elementary school teacher), and Hans-Martin Walter (still in
high school). I am not surprised that they show no intention to
follow in my footsteps, although if I had a second chance myself,
I would certainly try to repeat my present career.
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1991, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1992
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1991