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James P Collman

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Name
  
James Collman



Books
  
Principles and Applications of Organotransition Metal Chemistry, Naturally dangerous

Education
  
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign (1958)

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences, US & Canada

Similar People
  
Kenneth S Suslick, Robert H Grubbs, Xumu Zhang, Ronald Breslow

Notable students
  
Kenneth S. Suslick

Academic advisor
  
Reynold C. Fuson

James P. Collman (born 1932 in Beatrice, Nebraska) is an American Professor of Chemistry. He is professor emeritus at Stanford University. Collman's research has focused on bioinorganic and biomimetic chemistry, by studying synthetic analogs of metalloenzymes.

Contents

Education

Collman received B.S. (1954) and M.S. degrees (1956) in Chemistry from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. He received a Ph.D. degree from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1958 under Reynold C. Fuson. He joined the faculty of University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, remaining there until 1967, when he moved to Stanford University where he is George & Hilda M. Daubert Endowed Chair in Chemistry.

Research contributions

Collman has contributed to several aspects of transition metal chemistry, as documented in over 366 scientific papers.

In the 1960s his group demonstrated that certain metal acetylacetonates undergo Friedel-Crafts-like reactions, indicating that these chelate rings have aromatic character.

In the area of organometallic chemistry, through reviews as well as original research, his group popularized the oxidative addition reaction, leading to the discovery of new low-valent complexes including Ru(CO)3(PPh3)2 and IrCl(N2)(PPh3)2. Collman's reagent, Na2Fe(CO)4, prepared in his laboratories, enables certain C-C coupling reactions in organic synthesis. He coauthored an influential textbook that went through three editions.

He popularized the use of tetraphenylporphyrin as a biomimetic ligand for exploring the structure and function of myoglobin, cytochrome P450, and cytochrome oxidase.

Awards and honors

  • Elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences
  • Received the American Chemical Society's award in Inorganic Chemistry.
  • 2009 - winner of American Chemical Society's Ronald L. Breslow Award for Biomimetic Chemistry
  • Collman has advised many academic researchers, many of whom have gone on to notable careers. Two of his postdoctoral researchers at Stanford, Karl Barry Sharpless and Robert H. Grubbs, later received Nobel Prizes in Chemistry.

    References

    James P. Collman Wikipedia