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Hideki Shirakawa

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Name
  
Hideki Shirakawa

Role
  
Chemist


Hideki Shirakawa superstarsofsciencecomwpcontentuploads201106

Born
  
August 20, 1936 (age 87) Tokyo, Japan (
1936-08-20
)

Institutions
  
University of PennsylvaniaUniversity of Tsukuba

Notable awards
  
Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2000

Education
  
Similar People
  
Alan J Heeger, Alan MacDiarmid, Kenzaburo Oe

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2000 Laureate Hideki Shirakawa


Hideki Shirakawa (白川 英樹 Shirakawa Hideki, born in Tokyo on August 20, 1936) is a Japanese chemist and winner of the 2000 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his discovery of conductive polymers together with physics professor Alan J. Heeger and chemistry professor Alan G. MacDiarmid at the University of Pennsylvania.

Contents

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Hideki Shirakawa | Wikipedia audio article


Biography

Hideki Shirakawa Laureate Hideki Shirakawa

1936 Born in Tokyo, in the family of a military doctor. Around third grade, he moved to Takayama, Gifu, which is the hometown of his mother.

Hideki Shirakawa Three Nobel Laureates Visit New Zealand Alan MacDiarmid Hideki

1961 Graduated from Tokyo Institute of Technology (Tokyo Tech), Chemical engineering department in the School of Science and Engineering.

1966 Received doctorate from Chemical engineering department in Graduate School of Science and Engineering at Tokyo Tech. Obtained the post of assistant in Chemical Resources Laboratory at Tokyo Tech.

1976 Post-doctoral researcher in the University of Pennsylvania, USA with invitation by Alan MacDiarmid.

1979 Assistant professor in University of Tsukuba, Japan

1982 Professor in University of Tsukuba, Japan

1991 Chief of Science and Engineering Department of Graduate School in University of Tsukuba, Japan (- March,1993)

1994 Chief of Category #3 group in University of Tsukuba, Japan (-March,1997)

Career

While employed as an assistant at Tokyo Institute of Technology (Tokyo Tech) in Japan, he developed polyacetylene, which has a metallic appearance. This result interested Alan MacDiarmid when MacDiarmid visited TITech in 1975.

In 1976, he was invited to work in the laboratory of Alan MacDiarmid as a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Pennsylvania. The two developed the electrical conductivity of polyacetylene along with American physicist Alan Heeger.

In 1977 they discovered that doping with iodine vapor could enhance the conductivity of polyacetylene. The three scientists were awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2000 in recognition of the discovery. With regard to the mechanism of electric conduction, it is strongly believed that nonlinear excitations in the form of solitons play a role.

Recognition

  • 1983 The Award of the Society of Polymer Science, Japan
  • 2000 SPSJ Award for Outstanding Achievement in Polymer Science and Technology
  • 2000 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
  • 2000 Order of Culture and selected as Person of Cultural Merit
  • 2000 Professor Emeritus of the University of Tsukuba
  • 2001 Special Award of the Chemical Society of Japan
  • Relatives

    One of his relatives, Hitomi Yoshizawa, is a member of the singing group Morning Musume Morning Girls. He is also related to Naoko Takahashi, the women's marathon gold medalist of the 2000 Summer Olympics.

    References

    Hideki Shirakawa Wikipedia