Famous Chemists Web Site
Here you can read life stories about famous powerful chemists!
Swiss researcher and teacher who in 1991 won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry for
his development of techniques for high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance
(NMR) spectroscopy. Ernst's refinements made NMR techniques a basic and
indispensable tool in chemistry and also extended their usefulness to other
sciences.
Ernst received both his B.A. in chemistry (1957) and his Ph.D. in physical chemistry (1962) from the Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. From 1963 to 1968 he worked as a research chemist in Palo Alto, Calif. In 1966, working with an American colleague, Ernst discovered that the sensitivity of NMR techniques (hitherto limited to analysis of only a few nuclei) could be dramatically increased by replacing the slow, sweeping radio waves traditionally used in NMR spectroscopy with short, intense pulses. His discovery enabled analysis of a great many more types of nuclei and smaller amounts of materials.
In 1968 he returned to Switzerland to teach at his alma mater. He was made
assistant professor in 1970 and full professor in 1976. His second major
contribution to the field of NMR spectroscopy was a technique that enabled a
high-resolution, "two-dimensional" study of larger molecules than had
previously been accessible to NMR. With Ernst's refinements, scientists were
able to determine the three-dimensional structure of organic and inorganic
compounds and of biological macromolecules such as proteins; to study the
interaction between biological molecules and other substances such as metal
ions, water, and drugs; to identify chemical species; and to study the rates of
chemical reactions. Ernst also was credited with many inventions and held
several patents in his field.
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