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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1995
Paul J. Crutzen, Mario J. Molina, F. Sherwood Rowland
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1995
Nobel Prize Award Ceremony
Paul J. Crutzen
Mario J. Molina
F. Sherwood Rowland
F. Sherwood Rowland
Born: 28 June 1927, Delaware, OH, USA
Died: 10 March 2012, Corona del Mar, CA, USA
Affiliation at the time of the award: University of California, Irvine, CA, USA
Prize motivation: "for their work in atmospheric chemistry, particularly concerning the formation and decomposition of ozone"
Field: Atmospheric and environmental chemistry

Autobiography
I was born on June 28, 1927, the second
of three sons, in the small central Ohio town of Delaware, the
home of Ohio Wesleyan University. My father and mother had moved
there the previous year when he took the position of Professor of
Mathematics and Chairman of the Department at Ohio Wesleyan. All
of my elementary and high school education was received in the
Delaware public schools from an excellent set of teachers. The
Delaware school system then believed in accelerated promotion, so
that I entered first grade at age 5 and skipped the fourth grade
entirely, with the result that I entered high school at 12 and
graduated a few weeks before my sixteenth birthday. The college
preparatory curriculum was strong on Latin, English, History,
Science and Mathematics. The academic side of high school was
easy for me, and I enjoyed it. In several summers of my early
teens, the high school science teacher entrusted to me during his
two week vacations the operation of the local volunteer weather
station, an auxiliary part of the U.S. weather service-maximum
and minimum temperatures and total precipitation. This was my
first exposure to systematic experimentation and data
collection.
Our home was filled with books, and all of us were avid readers.
My reading at that time ran toward naval history, which was
complemented with realistic scale-models and simulated naval
battles using an elaborate mathematical system for rating each
warship and the effects of combat on them. During my sophomore
year in high school, my math teacher, who also coached tennis and
basketball, encouraged me to take up tennis - which led me onto
the varsity tennis team for my junior and senior years, and into
a full decade of intense athletic competition. As a senior, I
played on the varsity basketball team.
After graduation from high school in 1943, almost all of my male
classmates immediately entered the military services. However,
because I was still well under the compulsory draft age of 18, I
enrolled at Ohio Wesleyan and attended the university year-round
for the next two years. During these war years, only 30 or 40
civilian males were on campus, plus about 200 naval officer
trainees and 1,000 women. With so few men available, I played on
the University basketball and baseball teams, and wrote much of
the sports page for the University newspaper.
My accelerated academic schedule made me eligible for my final
year of university in June, 1945, as I approached my 18th
birthday. However, with the fighting in the Pacific and the
continuing military draft, I enlisted in a Navy program to train
radar operators. The Pacific war ended while I was still in basic
training near Chicago, and I served the next year in several
midwestern Naval Separation Centers, as the 10,000,000 Americans
who had preceded me into the military were returned to civilian
life. A major amount of this Navy time was devoted to competitive
athletics for the Navy base teams, and I emerged after 14 months
as a non commissioned officer with a rating of Specialist
(Athletics) 3rd class. My first real opportunity to see the rest
of the United States came when I was transferred to San Pedro,
California for discharge from the Navy.
I then hitchhiked 2000 miles back to Ohio, traveling through
Yosemite and Yellowstone Park on the way.
This year away from the academic life convinced me that at age
19, there was little reason for me to seek a quick finish to my
undergraduate education. I therefore arranged my schedule to take
two more years rather than one to graduate, and continued to play
basketball on the university team. My coursework at Ohio Wesleyan
emphasized science within a liberal arts curriculum, with more or
less equal amounts of chemistry, physics and mathematics, and
majors in all three fields. As had been the case in high school,
I really enjoyed the academic side of university life.
I do not honestly remember when the decision that I would go to
graduate school was made. My father had studied for his Ph.D.,
and all of us took it for granted that I would, too. Furthermore,
both my parents had firm convictions that the University of
Chicago, which each had attended, was not just the best choice
for graduate work, but the only choice. So I applied to the
Department of Chemistry at the University of Chicago for Fall
1948, and was duly admitted. All service veterans were entitled
to a certain number of months (27 in my case) of paid university
education, and I had not used any of these credits during my
undergraduate years at Ohio Wesleyan because faculty children did
not pay tuition, and I lived at home. I therefore didn't apply
for any of the teaching assistantships or academic fellowships,
and was quite surprised after arriving in Chicago to find that
many of my fellow students were being paid by the University to
attend graduate school. In subsequent years, I was supported by
an Atomic Energy Commission (A.E.C.) national fellowship.
At that time, the Chemistry Department of the University of
Chicago had a policy of immediately assigning each new graduate
student to a temporary faculty adviser prior to the choice of an
individual research topic. My randomly assigned mentor was
Willard F. Libby, who had just
finished developing the Carbon-14 Dating technique for which he
received the 1960 Nobel Prize. Bill Libby (although I never
called him anything but "Professor Libby" until I was more than
40 years old) was a charismatic, brusque (on first meeting, "I
see you made all A's in undergraduate school. We're here to find
out if you are any damn good!") dynamo, with a very wide range of
fertile ideas for scientific research. I settled automatically
and happily into his research group, and became a radiochemist
working on the chemistry of radioactive atoms. Almost everything
I learned about how to be a research scientist came from
listening to and observing Bill Libby.
The first nuclear reactor had been built by Enrico Fermi in 1942
under the football stands at the University of Chicago, and the
post-war university had managed to capture many of the leading
scientists from the Manhattan Project into the Physics and
Chemistry departments. My impression at the time (and now in
retrospect 45 years later) was that this was an unbelievably
exciting time in the physical sciences at the University of
Chicago. My physical chemistry course was taught by Harold Urey for two quarters and in the
third quarter by Edward Teller; inorganic chemistry was given by
Henry Taube; radiochemistry by
Libby. I also attended courses on Nuclear Physics given by
Maria Goeppert
Mayer and by Fermi. (The chemistry
student grapevine said, "Go to any lecture that Fermi gives on
any subject"). Urey and Fermi already had been awarded Nobel
Prizes, and Libby, Mayer and Taube were to receive theirs in the
future.
My thesis concerned the chemical state of cyclotron-produced
radioactive bromine atoms. The nuclear process not only creates a
radioactive atom, but breaks it loose from all of its chemical
bonds. These highly energetic atoms exist only in very, very low
concentration, but can subsequently be traced by their eventual
radioactive decay. Bill Libby gave his graduate students an
unusual amount of leeway in how they chose to use their time, and
was a superb research superviser - supporting, encouraging, but
never letting one forget that intensive critical thought,
together with unrelenting hard work on experiments, underlay all
progress in our research.
My interest in competitive athletics also continued unabated in
graduate school. Because of the atypical structure of its
undergraduate college system, the University of Chicago, unlike
almost all other American universities, permitted graduate
students to compete in intercollegiate athletics. During my first
graduate year, I played both basketball and baseball for the
University teams. I continued to play baseball for the University
during the spring for two more years, and spent both of those
summers playing semi-professional baseball for a Canadian team in
Oshawa, Ontario. Each winter I also played for several basketball
teams around the city of Chicago.
Without a doubt, however, the major extracurricular event of
those four years at the University of Chicago was meeting and
then marrying on June 7, 1952, Joan Lundberg, also a graduate of
the University. We have now shared more than 43 years of married
life - and shared is really the descriptive word. I finished my
Ph. D. thesis in August of 1952, and we went off to Princeton
University in September of that year for my new position of
Instructor in the Chemistry Department. Our daughter Ingrid was
born in Princeton in the summer of 1953, and our son Jeffrey in
Huntington, Long Island, in the summer of 1955.
In each of the years from 1953-55, I spent the summer in the
Chemistry Department of the Brookhaven National Laboratory. An
early experiment there of putting a powdered mixture of the sugar
glucose and lithium carbonate into the neutron flux of the
Brookhaven nuclear reactor resulted in a one-step synthesis of
radioactive tritium-labeled glucose, an article in
Science, and a new sub-field of tritium "hot atom"
chemistry. The A.E.C. also expressed considerable interest in
this tracer chemistry, and offered support for continuation of
the research.
In 1956, I moved to an Assistant Professorship at the University
of Kansas, which had just completed a new chemistry building
including special facilities for radiochemistry. Contract support
from the A.E.C. was already approved, and in place when I arrived
that summer. Several excellent graduate students interested in
radiochemistry joined my research group that summer, and were
shortly joined by others and by a series of postdoctoral research
associates, including many from Europe and Japan. This research
group was very productive for the next eight years, chiefly
investigating the chemical reactions of energetic tritium atoms
and I moved through the ranks to a full Professorship. Both
Ingrid and Jeff grew up knowing the members of the group -
meeting everyone at our regular home seminars, and from an early
age occasionally visiting the laboratory. During these Kansas
years, too, the everyday routine was that the entire family came
home for lunch. Later on in California, Ingrid and Jeff each
worked regularly (but unpaid) drafting slide and journal
illustrations for the chemistry department, and thereby
continuing to know the members of my research group.
The Irvine campus of the University of California was scheduled
to open for students in September, 1965, and I went there in
August, 1964, as Professor of Chemistry and the first Chairman of
the Chemistry Department. The A.E.C. support turned out to be
truly long-term, surviving this transfer, and then the
transformations of the A.E.C. into the Energy Research and
Development Administration and then into the Department of
Energy. That basic contract finally terminated in 1994, by which
time NASA was furnishing the major support for our continuing
research.
"Hot atom" chemistry continued to play a major role in our
research efforts at the University of California Irvine. However,
I have deliberately followed a policy of trying to instill some
freshness into our research efforts by every few years extending
our work into some new, challenging aspect of chemistry - first,
radioactive tracer photochemistry, using tritium and carbon-14;
then chlorine and fluorine chemistry using the radioactive
isotopes 38Cl and 18F
When I decided in 1970 to retire from the Chemistry department
chairmanship, I once again sought some new avenue of chemistry
for our investigation. Because the state of the environment had
become a significant topic for discussion both by the general
public and within our family, I traveled to Salzburg, Austria,
for an International Atomic Energy Agency meeting on the
environmental applications of radioactivity. Afterward on the
train to Vienna, I shared a compartment with an A.E.C. program
officer also coming from the IAEA meeting. He learned in our
conversation that I was personally interested in atmospheric
science because of my early association and admiration for the
14C work of Bill Libby, and further that my research
had then been supported by the A.E.C. for the previous 14 years.
I in turn learned that one of his A.E.C. responsibilities was the
organization of a series of Chemistry-Meteorology Workshops, with
the intention of encouraging more cross-fertilization between
these two scientific fields.
In due course, I was invited to the second of these workshops in
January, 1972, in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where I heard a
presentation about recent measurements by the English scientist,
Jim Lovelock, of the atmospheric concentrations of a trace
species, the man-made chlorofluorocarbon CCl3F, on the
cruise of the Shackleton to Antarctica. His shipboard
observations showed its presence in both the northern and
southern hemispheres, although in quite low concentration. One of
the special advantages cited for this molecule was that it would
be an excellent tracer for air mass movements because its
chemical inertness would prevent its early removal from the
atmosphere.
As a chemical kineticist and photochemist, I knew that such a
molecule could not remain inert in the atmosphere forever, if
only because solar photochemistry at high altitudes would break
it down. However, many other possible chemical fates could be
imagined, and I wondered whether any of these might occur. In
early 1973, my regular yearly proposal was submitted to the
A.E.C. and was duly approved and funded by them. In addition to
the continuation of several radiochemistry experiments, I also
included in the proposal a new direction - asking the question:
what would eventually happen to the chlorofluorocarbon compounds
in the atmosphere?
Later that year, Mario Molina, who had just completed his Ph. D.
work as a laser chemist at the University of California Berkeley,
joined my research group as a postdoctoral research associate.
Offered his choice among several areas for our collaborative
research, Mario chose the one furthest from his previous
experience and from my own experience as well, and we began
studying the atmospheric fate of the chlorofluorocarbon
molecules.
Within three months, Mario and I realized that this was not just
a scientific question, challenging and interesting to us, but a
potentially grave environmental problem involving substantial
depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer. A major part of both
of our careers since has been spent on the continuing threads of
this original problem.
Since 1973, the work of my research group has progressively
involved more atmospheric chemistry and less radiochemistry until
now our only important use of radioisotopes is directed toward
problems associated with atmospheric chemistry. This research
work has been conducted at the University of California Irvine by
a strong, hard-working group of postdoctoral and graduate student
research associates, together with some able technical
specialists.
The chlorofluorocarbon-ozone problem became a highly visible
public concern in late 1974, and brought with it many new
scientific experiments, and also legislative hearings, extensive
media coverage, and a much heavier travel schedule for me. This
change came after both Ingrid and Jeff had moved away from home
for their own university educations, leaving Joan free to
accompany me in these travels. She has attended-and sat through
with perceptive interest - countless scientific meetings since
1975. She quickly became quite conversant with the general
scientific aspects of ozone depletion, and has been a
knowledgeable and trusted confidante through all of the last two
decades of ozone research. Ingrid and Jeff, too, have maintained
close contact and support during those often controversial
years.
In many ways, the understanding of atmospheric chemistry is still
in an early stage. The necessary instrumental precision and
sensitivity for dealing with chemical species in such low
concentrations has only been progressively available over the
last two decades, and of course the trace composition of the
atmosphere is highly variable around the world. The research
group has been heavily involved in a series of regional and
global experiments, often since 1988 as participants in
comprehensive aircraft-based atmospheric field research. Some of
this research involves challenging and interesting scientific
puzzles, and some can also be described as directed toward global
environmental problems. As with the ozone depletion capability of
the chlorofluorocarbons, one does not always know until well into
the work whether it belongs to the second category as well as the
first. We continue to find fascination in the chemistry of the
atmosphere.
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1995, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1996
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate.
F. Sherwood Rowland died on 10 March 2012.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1995
MLA style: "F. Sherwood Rowland - Autobiography". Nobelprize.org. 21 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1995/rowland.html
