Presentation Speech by Professor Bengt Nordén of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, December 10, 1999.
Translation of the Swedish text.
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| Professor Bengt Nordén delivering
the Presentation Speech for the 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
at the Stockholm Concert Hall. Photo: Hans Mehlin, Nobelprize.org |
Your Majesties, Your Royal Highness, Ladies
and Gentlemen,
We chemists want to understand molecules and their intrinsic
essence, and to be able to predict what happens when molecules
meet – do they attach weakly to each other or do they react
passionately to form new molecules? Not least, we want to
understand the complicated chemistry called life. Through a
revolution in knowledge, molecules today take center stage in all
fields, from biology and medicine through environmental sciences,
and technology.
The heart of chemistry is the chemical reaction, meaning the
breaking and formation of chemical bonds between atoms. How then
do chemical reactions occur? We all know that they can proceed at
different rates – compare the time it takes a nail to rust
with explosion of dynamite! Alfred Nobel knew that reaction rates
are important; dynamite reacts too rapidly to be used in cannons
– they would blow up. He also knew that chemical reactions
proceed at greater speed at higher temperatures, but he did not
see why. This was, however, realized by the docent of
physical chemistry in Uppsala, Svante Arrhenius.
Inspired by the Dutch scientist Jacobus van't Hoff
(the first Nobel Laureate in Chemistry, 1901), Arrhenius
presented the first theory on reaction rates and an equation for
their temperature dependence that has been used for more than a
hundred years now. Arrhenius was himself awarded the third Nobel
Prize in Chemistry (1903), but for different achievements.
Science has always strived to see smaller and smaller things and
faster and faster events. Since the time of Arrhenius a number of
methods have been developed to measure increasingly faster
reaction rates, many of them rewarded with Nobel Prizes. However,
no one had, until recently, been able to observe what actually
happens to the reacting molecule as it passes through its
so-called transition state, a metaphor for a kind of
intermediate state of the reaction in which bonds are broken and
formed. This remained a misty no-man's land.
The molecule passes the transition state as fast as the atoms in
the molecule move. They move at a speed of the order of 1000
m/second – about as fast as a rifle bullet – and the
time required for the atoms to move slightly within the molecule
is typically tens of femtoseconds (1 fs =
10-15 seconds). Only few
believed that such fast events would ever be possible to
see.
This, however, is exactly what Ahmed Zewail has managed to do.
Twelve years ago he published results that gave birth to the
scientific field called femtochemistry. This can be described as
using the fastest camera in the world to film the molecules
during the reaction and to get a sharp picture of the transition
state. His "camera" is a laser technique with light flashes of
only a few tens of femtoseconds in duration. The reaction is
initiated by a strong laser flash and is then studied by a series
of subsequent flashes to follow the events. The key to his
success was that the first femtosecond flash or starting shot,
excited all molecules in the sample at once, causing their atoms
to swing in rhythm. The first experiments demonstrated in slow
motion how bonds were stretched and broken in rather simple
reactions, but soon studies of more complex reactions followed.
The results were often surprising, and the dance of the atoms
during the reaction was found to differ from what was expected.
Zewail's use of the fast laser technique can be likened to
Galilei's use of his telescope, which he directed towards
everything that lit up the vault of heaven. Zewail tried his
femtosecond laser on literally everything that moved in the world
of molecules. He turned his telescope towards the frontiers of
science.
Ahmed Zewail is being awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry
because he was the first to conduct experiments that clearly show
the decisive moments in the life of a molecule – the
breaking and formation of chemical bonds. He has been able to see
the reality behind Arrhenius' theory.
It is of great importance to be able in detail to understand and
predict the progress of a chemical reaction. Femtochemistry has
found applications in all branches of chemistry, but also in
adjoining fields such as material science (future
electronics?) and biology. The retinal molecule is an example
- a substance that you are all making use of at this very moment,
namely to see with. It has been found that light causes this
molecule to twist like a hinge around a well-greased bond, which
sends a nerve signal to the brain. The reaction takes only 200
fs, which explains the eye's sensitivity to light.
Femtochemistry has radically changed the way we look at chemical
reactions. A hundred years of mist surrounding the transition
state has cleared.
Professor Zewail. I have tried to explain how your pioneering
work has fundamentally changed the way scientists view chemical
reactions. From being restricted to describe them only in terms
of a metaphor, the transition state, we can now study the actual
movements of atoms in molecules. We can speak of them in time and
space in the same way that we imagine them. They are no longer
invisible.
May I convey to you my warmest congratulations on behalf of the
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and ask you to come forward to
receive the 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry from the hands of His
Majesty the King.
Professor Kohn. You were awarded
last year's Nobel Prize together with Professor John Pople for your
contributions to Computational Quantum Chemistry. They have been
of fundamental importance also in the context of this year's
Nobel Prize, as calculations of energies and structures of the
molecules in their various states are crucial for the
interpretation of the experiments.
On behalf of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, may I warmly
congratulate you and ask you to come forward to receive the 1998
Nobel Prize in Chemistry from the hands of His Majesty the
King.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1999