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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1954
Linus Pauling
Linus Carl Pauling
Born: 28 February 1901, Portland, OR, USA
Died: 19 August 1994, Big Sur, CA, USA
Affiliation at the time of the award: California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Pasadena, CA, USA
Prize motivation: "for his research into the nature of the chemical bond and its application to the elucidation of the structure of complex substances"
Field: Theoretical chemistry, chemical bonding

Biography
Linus Carl Pauling was born in
Portland, Oregon, on 28th February, 1901, the son of a druggist,
Herman Henry William Pauling, who, though born in Missouri, was
of German descent, and his wife, Lucy Isabelle Darling, born in
Oregon of English-Scottish ancestry.
Linus attended the public elementary and high schools in the town
of Condon and the city of Portland, Oregon, and entered the
Oregon State College in 1917, receiving the degree of B.Sc. in
chemical engineering in 1922. During the years 1919-1920 he
served as a full-time teacher of quantitative analysis in the
State College, after which he was appointed a Teaching Fellow in
Chemistry in the California Institute of Technology and was a
graduate student there from 1922 to 1925, working under Professor
Roscoe G. Dickinson and Richard C. Tolman. In 1925 he was awarded
the Ph.D. (summa cum laude) in chemistry, with minors in
physics and mathematics.
Since 1919 his interest lay in the field of molecular structure
and the nature of the chemical bond, inspired by papers by
Irving Langmuir on the
application of the Lewis theory of the sharing of pairs of
electrons between atoms to many substances. In 1921 he suggested,
and attempted to carry out, an experiment on the orientation of
iron atoms by a magnetic field, through the electrolytic
deposition of a layer of iron in a strong magnetic field and the
determination of the orientation of the iron crystallises by
polishing and etching the deposit, and microscopic examination of
the etch figures. With Professor Dickinson, he began in 1922 the
experimental determination of the structures of some crystals,
and also started theoretical work on the nature of the chemical
bond.
Since his appointment to the Staff of California Institute of
Technology, Professor Pauling was elected Research Associate in
1925; National Research Fellow in Chemistry, 1925-1926; Fellow of
the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, 1926-1927 (through
this last he worked in European Universities with Sommerfeld,
Schrödinger, and
Bohr); Assistant
Professor of Chemistry, 1927-1929; Associate Professor,
1929-1931; Professor, 1931, when he was the first recipient of
the American Chemical Society Award in Pure Chemistry - the
Langmuir Prize - and Chairman of the Division of Chemistry and
Chemical Engineering, and Director of the Gates and Crellin
laboratories of Chemistry, 1936-1958. In 1963, he was awarded the
Nobel Peace
Prize.
Pauling is a member of numerous professional societies in the
U.S.A. as well as in many European countries, India, Japan and
Chile. Awards, medals, and honorary degrees were showered upon
him in America and Europe, and in addition he was elected
Rationalist of the Year for 1960 and Humanist of the Year for
1961. Several books have come from his pen, ranging from his most
famous one The Nature of the Chemical Bond, and the Structure
of Molecules and Crystals (1939, 1949, 1960) via General
Chemistry (1947, 1953), which was translated into nine
languages, to No More War! (1958, 1959,1962).
The subjects of the papers he published reflect his great
scientific versatility: about 350 publications in the fields of
experimental determination of the structure of crystals by the
diffraction of X-rays and the interpretation of these structures
in terms of the radii and other properties of atoms; the
application of quantum mechanics to physical and chemical
problems, including dielectric constants, X-ray doublets,
momentum distribution of electrons in atoms, rotational motion of
molecules in crystals, Van der Waals forces, etc.; the structure
of metals and intermetallic compounds, the theory of
ferromagnetism; the nature of the chemical bond, including the
resonance phenomenon in chemistry; the experimental determination
of the structure of gas molecules by the diffraction of
electrons; the structure of proteins; the structure of antibodies
and the nature of serological reactions; the structure and
properties of hemoglobin and related substances; abnormal
hemoglobin molecules in relation to the hereditary hemolytic
anemias; the molecular theory of general anesthesia; an
instrument for determining the partial pressure of oxygen in a
gas; and other subjects.
Pauling married Ava Helen Miller of Beaver Creek, Oregon, in
1923. She is of English-Scottish and German descent. They have
four children, Linus (Carl) Jr. (1925), Peter Jeffress (1931),
Linda Helen (1932) and Edward Crellin (1937), and thirteen
grandchildren.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Linus Pauling died on August 19, 1994.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1954
MLA style: "Linus Pauling - Biography". Nobelprize.org. 23 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1954/pauling.html
