Good Chemistry

Prizewinner Barry Sharpless ’63 knows how to get a reaction.

The College’s only living Nobel laureate, Sharpless recently added a new award to his collection: a Priestley Medal, the American Chemical Society’s highest honor. No big deal: “I am just a chemist who’s spent my life trying to make it possible for chemists to do better chemistry,” he says. Sharpless was recognized for his work in “click chemistry,” which describes a specific class of reactions that all “click into place.” The scientist, who coined the term with his wife, spoke on campus in October as part of Dartmouth’s 250th anniversary. Sharpless won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2001.

 

 

 

Portfolio

Plot Boiler
New titles from Dartmouth writers (September/October 2024)
Big Plans
Chris Newell ’96 expands Native program at UConn.
Second Chapter

Barry Corbet ’58 lived two lives—and he lived more fully in both of them than most of us do in one.

Alison Fragale ’97
A behavioral psychologist on power, status, and the workplace

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