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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1912
Victor Grignard, Paul Sabatier
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by Professor H.G. Söderbaum, President of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, on December 10, 1912
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
The aim of the scientist is, or should be, to extend the limits
of human knowledge. However, the roads open to him are many and
he can render service in his chosen field in various ways. By
developing fertile theories or hypotheses he may blaze new trails
for human thought; by discovering unknown facts he may enrich our
knowledge, and by inventing new technical devices and new methods
he may forge new weapons for the arsenal of Science. This last
way is not the least important.
It is true that a Scheele in his time and with astonishingly poor
resources at his disposal succeeded in obtaining results which
astounded the world and covered him with immortal glory. But this
is now part of the history of Science and belongs to an age long
since vanished; such a thing cannot happen again, any more than a
people can relive its youth or an individual his childhood.
The natural sciences are advancing rapidly and we are constantly
up against new and ever more complicated problems, where the old
technical resources cease to be of any avail and where the
invention of other means is indispensable to progress.
It was against this background that the Royal Academy of Sciences
decided to award the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1912 to the
inventors of two new working methods, each excellent in its own
field. Half of the prize goes to Victor Grignard, Professor at
the University of Nancy, for his invention of the reagent named
after him, and half to Paul Sabatier, Dean of the Faculty of
Sciences at Toulouse University, for his method of hydrogenating
organic compounds in the presence of finely divided metals.
The methods in respect of which the awards were made both belong
to the field of organic chemical synthesis, the purpose of which
is the artificial production of organic compounds, i.e.
derivatives with carbon as basic element, whether or not such
derivatives are found in that exact form in the animal or
vegetable kingdom. This branch of chemistry is fairly young; it
is usually considered to date from a discovery made in 1828 by
Friedrich Wöhler, a disciple of Berzelius. From this humble
beginning, from one isolated observation, organic synthesis has
developed, especially during the last half century, into
something of undreamed-of importance not only for the science of
chemistry itself but also for the application of chemistry to
everyday life. It is certainly no exaggeration to say that those
branches of industry which are based on the use of synthetic
methods in organic chemistry have provided a livelihood for
millions of men and have created wealth to the value of thousands
of millions of pounds.
For this reason discoveries opening the way to new developments
in this sphere can be said to "have conferred the greatest
benefit on mankind", irrespective of whether these words are
taken in a wider sense or in a limited, not to say literal,
sense.
Professor Grignard's method is the culmination of a series of
investigations, carried out with remarkable technical skill,
which revealed that metallic magnesium in the presence of
ether reacts on organic derivatives of chlorine, bromine and
iodine by forming ether-soluble organic compounds of magnesium.
These latter compounds in turn react extremely readily with a
large number of other organic substances, so that carbon combines
with carbon, i.e. forming a true organic synthesis.
The importance of Grignard's method to organic chemistry lies in
the number of essential virtues that it possesses, namely
simplicity of procedure, and therefore saving of time; low cost
of materials employed; satisfactory yield and, most important of
all, a very wide application. From this last point of view no
method of organic synthesis superior to that of Grignard's is
known, and indeed there is scarcely any sphere of organic
chemistry outside its scope.
The services which this method has rendered to Science are great,
but no less great are those which it can be expected to render in
future. Shall we, for instance, ever learn how to produce
artificially alkaloids or vegetable organic bases, which are so
important in medicine but which are still so diffilcult to
prepare and therefore so costly? If we do there is little doubt
that this will only be with the aid of Grignard's reagent.
Professor Grignard. Anyone who has been
concerned with organic chemistry during recent years knows how
greatly you have contributed to the advancement of this branch of
science. The number of remarkable and important investigations
which have been made possible by the reagent invented by and
named after you is already most imposing, and it continues to
increase every day. Your method has thus pushed back appreciably
the frontiers of our knowledge, of our ability to observe; and
not only that, it is also opening up prospects of new conquests
for our science.
It is therefore with genuine satisfaction and in the certainty of
acting in full accordance with the wishes of the scientific world
that the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has awarded you the
Nobel Prize for Chemistry for this year, and I have the honour to
ask you to accept it from the hands of His Majesty the King, who
has graciously agreed to present it to you.
The new method, which has been named after
its inventor Professor Sabatier, consists of the reduction of
organic compounds under the action of finely powdered metals -
nickel, cobalt, copper, iron or platinum. This method is as
follows: An oxide of one of these metals is heated to 300°C
in a current of hydrogen gas. After the metal has been reduced in
this way the heat is decreased and vapour of the organic
substance which has to be reduced is mixed with the hydrogen
gas.
The method is very simple and convenient and its yield is high.
In addition to these advantages it is completely safe, which
happily distinguishes it from the reaction method hitherto most
widely used, which all too often gave rise to explosions, some of
them very serious.
Sabatier's reduction method has been very extensively employed
not only by its inventor and his disciples, and it has opened up
new fields of scientific research; it has also rendered service
to many scientists in various countries and has enabled them to
obtain important results which would have been impossible with
the old methods. Moreover, several chemists have introduced
various modifications for different purposes, and this has
considerably increased the range of its uses.
Among the most interesting results obtained with Sabatier's
method I will confine myself to recalling how Professor Sabatier,
by applying under various experimental conditions his reagent to
the hydrogen carbide, acetylene, succeeded in producing higher
homologues of hydrocarbons identical with those contained in
natural petroleum of different origins, for instance American,
Russian or Galician, upon which phenomenon he based a general
theory for explaining the origin of different mineral oils.
Professor Sabatier. In one of your works,
with which I have been very familiar for several years, you say
that "in the study of the phenomena of the physical world, no
matter what these phenomena may be, the basis of any system must
be observation, precise, strict, and free from all
preconceptions". These are memorable words, which to many may
seem a truism, though the message they contain frequently goes
unheeded; they cannot therefore be repeated too often.
You, Sir, have not merely professed this doctrine in your books -
you have applied it throughout your scientific career. Thanks to
this constant application of your principles you have achieved
results whose value - and this we can say with certainty - will
always remain.
For me it is a most gratifying duty to congratulate you on behalf
of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences upon your brilliant
scientific achievements, and in particular your general method of
hydrogenating organic compounds in the presence of reduced metals
and catalysts, a method which in the sphere of organic chemistry
has during the past few years made possible much progress and the
opening-up of so many new fields to science.
It is for the discovery of this brilliant method that the Academy
is pleased to bestow on you its highest reward.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1901-1921, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1966
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1912
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