Nobel Prize in Chemistry awarded for 'the world's smallest machines'
Jean-Pierre Sauvage, J. Fraser Stoddart and Bernard Feringa developed 'molecules with controllable movements'
The 2016 Nobel Prize in Chemistry has been awarded jointly to researchers Jean-Pierre Sauvage, J. Fraser Stoddart and Bernard Feringa "for their design and productionof molecular machines," the RoyalSwedish Academy of Sciencesannounced on Wednesday morning in Stockholm.
"They have developed molecules with controllable movements,which can perform a task when energy is added," the organizationsaid in a statement.
The three scientistswill share the prize, which is worth about $1.2 million Cdn (eight million kronor).
The workSauvage, Stoddartand Feringadid relating to their Nobel-winning work wasin France, the U.S. and the Netherlands, respectively.
"I feel like I'm walking on air," Sauvagetold reporters in Strasbourg, France, after learning of the win. "It would be hard not to feel like you were walking on air in a situation like this."
The award-winning work has "taken chemistry to a new dimension," the academy's statement said.
Each of the three researchers played a role in developing a molecular machine:
- Sauvage took the first step in 1983, when he was able to link two ring-shaped molecules together to form a chain in which the parts could move relative to each other.
- In 1991, Stoddartdeveloped a "rotaxane," in which a molecular ring could move along a molecular axle.
- In 1999, Feringa developed a "molecular motor" by getting a "molecular rotor blade to spin continually in the same direction."
The academy compared the molecular motor's stage of development to where "the electric motor was in the 1830s,when scientists displayed various spinning cranks and wheels, unaware that they would lead to electric trains, washing machines, fans and food processors."
Photo of 2016 Chemistry Laureate Bernard Feringa @univgroningen (from 2013)#NobelPrize pic.twitter.com/NBKy6hy6ES
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"If you really want to go as far as the applications for molecular machines, you might want to think about anything that's in movement with tiny objects," Sauvagetold reporters in French onWednesday. "I don't know, we're talking about science fiction mini-robots, micro-robots which will certainly be produced one day. They'll need joints, those joints will need to be able to move, so you might want to think about muscles, about wheels, systems to produce movement."
"Another possible area once again, possible, we're still talking about science fiction is nanomedicine, with the transportation of active molecules, molecules of medicine inside an organism."
The chemistry prize was the last of this year's Nobelscience awards.
The medicine prize went to a Japanese biologist who discovered the process by which a cell breaks down and recycles content. The physics prize was shared by three British-born scientists for theoretical discoveries that shed light on strange states of matter.
The Nobel Peace Prize will be announced on Friday, and the economics and literature awards will be announced next week.
All prizes will be handed out at ceremonies in Stockholm and Oslo on Dec. 10, the anniversary of prize founder Alfred Nobel's death in 1896.
In 2011, Ben Feringas research group built a four-wheel drive nanocar: #NobelPrize pic.twitter.com/Cz7qAjfGR4
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Stoddarts research group has constructed molecular machines. A lift which can raise itself 0.7 nanometres above a surface: #NobelPrize pic.twitter.com/HwTEWiVsT3
—@NobelPrize
Jean-Pierre Sauvage has threaded two molecular loops together, so that the structure can stretch and contract. #NobelPrize pic.twitter.com/JBHqnuiAcJ
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With files from Reuters and The Associated Press