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Herbert Gutowskys
pioneering work made nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy one of the
most effective tools in chemical and medical research. Gutowsky received
a bachelors degree from Indiana University in 1940, and after a
four-year interruption for military service, he was awarded a masters
degree from the University of California at Berkeley in 1946. Gutowsky
earned his Ph.D. in chemistry from Harvard University under George Kistiakowsky
and joined the faculty of the University of Illinois in 1948. He became
a full professor in 1956. His research interests as a young faculty member
included molecular and solid-state structure and infrared and radio frequency
spectroscopy, including nuclear magnetic resonance and electron paramagnetic
resonance.
Gutowsky was the first chemist to apply the NMR method to chemical research,
and his investigations into the principles of NMR and its uses has had
a monumental effect on virtually all scientific investigations requiring
the analysis of molecular structure. His work led to the development of
experimental and theoretical tools for studying the structure and dynamics
of molecules in liquids, solids, and gases. In short, Gutowskys
breakthrough discoveries made NMR one of the most important spectroscopic
tools in chemical and biochemical research.
Gutowsky and his students made great advances in the early days of NMR,
discovering the phenomenon of spin-spin coupling and recognizing its utility
for the assignment of structure. He steadily increased the breadth of
studies of the structure and molecular motion of molecules, the origin
of chemical shifts in NMR spectra, and the use of NMR to identify complex
organic compounds. Gutowsky and his colleagues demonstrated that NMR could
be used to study exchange processes in chemical systems and to identify
and characterize complex compounds.
Gutowsky became head of the Department of Chemistry at Illinois in 1967,
and in 1970 he oversaw the creation of the School of Chemical Sciences,
which included the departments of chemistry and chemical engineering.
He served as Director of the School of Chemical Sciences from 1970 to
1983. He then returned to teaching and research, moving into a second
research career in Fourier-transform microwave spectroscopic studies of
small, weakly bonded molecules in the gas phase.
Gutowskys many achievements were recognized by his election to the
National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,
and the American Philosophical Society. He was also elected a fellow of
the American Physical Society and of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science.
Gutowsky received may awards, including two from the American Chemical
Society, the Irving Langmuir Award in Chemical Physics in 1966 and the
Peter Debye Award in Physical Chemistry in 1975. He was also awarded the
prestigious National Medal of Science in 1977 and the Wolf Prize in Chemistry
in 1983.
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