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Chemistry Nobel laureate flunked his first exam in discipline

Connect the quantom dots. The winners of this year’s Nobel Prize in Chemistry are pioneers in the nanoworld.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology chemist Moungi Bawendi, one of three co-winners of the 2023 Nobel prize. Picture: AFP
Massachusetts Institute of Technology chemist Moungi Bawendi, one of three co-winners of the 2023 Nobel prize. Picture: AFP
AFP

The winners of this year’s Nobel Prize in Chemistry are pioneers in the nanoworld.

During the 1980s, Alexi Ekimov, 78, and Louis Brus, 80, working independently and on opposite sides of the Iron Curtain, succeeding in creating “quantum dots” – nanoparticles that are found today in next-generation TV screens and that are being used to illuminate tumours in the body.

A decade later, 62-year-old Moungi Bawendi revolutionised methods to manufacture them with precision and at scale, paving the way for their applications.

Professor Bawendi was born in 1961 in Paris, France, to a Tunisian father and French mother.

His family emigrated to the US when he was 10 years old, and though he excelled at science in high school, he flunked his first college chemistry class at Harvard.

“It could easily have destroyed me, my first experience with an F, the lowest grade in my class by far,” he said overnight on Wednesday (AEST).

He persevered, earning his undergraduate degree and later his PhD at the University of Chicago. He would later join Professor Brus at Bell Laboratories, then finally at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he remains today.

“I’m especially honoured to share this with Louis Brus, who was my postdoctoral mentor ... I tried to emulate his scholarship and mentoring style as a professor myself,” he said.

Louis Brus. Picture: AFP
Louis Brus. Picture: AFP

Professor Bawendi built upon the work of his co-laureates and in 1993 succeeded in vastly improving the methods to create quantum dots, finding just the right solvent and temperature to grow nanocrystals to specific sizes.

Professors Ekimov and Brus grew up in the post-war era. Professor Ekimov was born in 1945 in the former USSR, and graduated from Leningrad State University.

Professor Ekimov was fascinated by coloured glass and the fact that a single substance could yield many colours. By experimenting with temperatures and heating times of molten glass, he found he was able to vary the size of the particles produced and that the smaller the particles were, the bluer the light they emitted.

He published his findings in a Soviet science journal 1981, and was the first person to intentionally create quantum dots – particles predicted by physics theory in the early 20th century but not until then demonstrated in reality.

At the same time, Professor Brus worked at the legendary Bell Laboratories in the US – then a hotbed for scientific discovery – on experiments that involved chopping up particles to provide a larger surface area and faster chemical reactions. During his work, he noticed that the particles’ optical and other properties shifted the smaller they became, something that could be explained only by quantum mechanics.

Alexei Ekimov. Picture: AFP
Alexei Ekimov. Picture: AFP

“I am a member of the Sputnik generation, raised after WWII as the US dramatically expanded science and technology in response to the Cold War,” he wrote in an autobiographical account after receiving the 2008 Kavli Prize.

Gifted from an early age in mathematics and science, he grew up in the suburbs of Kansas City, where he says he “developed an affinity for tools and machines by working after school and on weekends in the local hardware store.”

He initially thought he would follow his father into business but after receiving his doctorate in 1969 from Columbia University in New York, he served in the US Navy, and became a researcher in a laboratory in Washington.

Then, in 1972, he began working for Bell Labs, where he remained for 23 years.

He is now a professor at ­Columbia University and a firm believer in the power of science.

“Scientists struggle daily with their experiments, and tend to lose sight of the enormous collective progress of science and technology over the decades,” Professor Brus wrote.

“Science has created a far better existence for mankind despite war, economic collapse and natural disaster.”

AFP

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/chemistry-nobel-laureate-flunked-his-first-exam-in-discipline/news-story/91f0966f008d53d9a4f3bf3baf23cff7