Germany’s Gerhard Ertl wins Nobel Chemistry Prize
Gerhard Ertl of Germany won the Nobel Chemistry Prize on Wednesday,
his 71st birthday, for work that has become invaluable to the modern
chemical industry and helped fight to fix the ozone hole.
“This science is important for the chemical industry and can help us
to understand such varied processes as why iron rusts, how fuel cells
function and how the catalysts in our cars work,” the jury said in its
citation.
It can also explain why Earth’s protective ozone layer is damaged
through chemical reactions on the surfaces of minute ice crystals in the
stratosphere, the panel added.
Ertl is a professor emeritus at Berlin’s Fritz Haber Institute, which
is part of the Max Planck Society.
The Nobel committee lauded him as a forerunner in surface chemistry,
a branch that evolved in the 1960s, and one of the first to understand
the potential of modern technology for exploring the new field.
Ertl’s achievement was creating a rigorous step-by-step experimental
method to build up a complete picture of a chemical reaction on a solid
surface.
These experiments are high-ticket affairs, as they require a
laboratory that is utterly free of contamination and able to apply
individual layers of atoms and molecules to a pure surface to observe
each phase of the reaction.
Ertl “laid the methodological foundations for an entire field of
research,” the citation said.
Ertl said the honour was a once-in-a-lifetime birthday present.
Oslo, Thursday, AFP |