Fourth Michael
P. Cava Lecture
February 14th-15th, 2013
Sir Fraser Stoddart
Northwestern University
Technical Talk
Structure and Mechanism in Radical Mechanostereochemistry
12:45 PM, Thursday, February 14th, 2013
1093 Shelby Hall
General
Interest Talk
Mingling Art and Science
2:00 PM, Friday, February 15th, 2013
1093 Shelby Hall
Reception to follow
All events are free and open to the public.
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Sir James Fraser Stoddart, FRS. The academic
career of Fraser Stoddart, who was born in the capital of Scotland
on Victoria Day (24 May) in 1942, can be traced through thick and
thin from the Athens of the North to the Windy City beside Lake
Michigan, with interludes on the edge of the Canadian Shield beside
Lake Ontario, in the Socialist Republic of South Yorkshire, on
the Plains of Cheshire beside the Wirral, in the Midlands in the
Heartland of Albion, and in the City of Angels alongside the Peaceful
Sea. He was raised, an only child, on a mixed-arable farm
a dozen miles south of Edinburgh. His formal education began with
his attending the local village school in Carrington, Midlothian
when he was four. A rigorous introduction to the three Rs – namely,
reading, writing and arithmetic – made it relatively easy
for him to make the transition to Melville College, a high school
in the middle of Edinburgh. He went to Edinburgh University
in 1960 and graduated with a BSc degree in 1964. During his
time as a postgraduate student in the Department of Chemistry he
cut his teeth in research investigating the nature of plant gums
of the Acacia genus within the School of Carbohydrate
Chemistry under Professor Sir Edmund Hirst.
In March 1967, Stoddart took his leave of the Chemistry
Department at Edinburgh with a PhD degree to spend the next three
years as a National Research Council of Canada Postdoctoral Fellow
at Queen’s
University with Professor J. K. N. Jones. No sooner had he
arrived in Kingston, Ontario, than a communication appeared in J.
Am. Chem. Soc. by Charles Pedersen, describing the synthesis
of dibenzo[18]crown-6 in excellent yield as a consequence of the
templating action of potassium ions. This seminal event marked
the beginning of Fraser’s fascination with chemistry beyond
the molecule, which, combined with his interest in templation,
has led to the template-directed synthesis, based on molecular
recognition and self-assembly processes, of a wide range of mechanically
interlocked molecules (e.g., catenanes and rotaxanes), bistable
variants of which have found their way into molecular electronic
devices and drug delivery systems.
Fraser met Norma Scholan (BSc chemist/PhD biochemist)
in 1966, while he was a postgraduate student and they started their
married lives in Canada in 1968. In 1970, they returned to the United
Kingdom, so that Fraser could take up an Imperial Chemical Industries
(ICI) Fellowship at Sheffield University, where he worked briefly
with Professor W. D. Ollis, before being appointed as a Lecturer
in Chemistry. After spending a three-year sabbatical (1978–1981)
at the ICI Corporate Laboratory in Runcorn, he returned to Sheffield,
where he was promoted to a Readership in Chemistry. It was during
his time at ICI that Stoddart developed his long-standing interest
in bipyridinium units (constituents of the ICI herbicides Diquat
and Paraquat) as redox-addressable building blocks for incorporation
into bistable catenanes and rotaxanes. In 2013, Fraser expects
to publish his 1000th paper: he has trained >350 graduate and
postdoctoral students of which >80 have subsequently embarked
on successful independent academic careers.
In 1990, he took up the Chair of Organic Chemistry
at Birmingham University, where he was Head of the School of Chemistry
(1993–97)
before moving to the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)
as the Saul Winstein Professor of Chemistry in 1997. In 2002, Fraser
became the Director of the California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI)
and assumed the Fred Kavli Chair of NanoSystems Sciences. He joined
the faculty at Northwestern University in 2008 as a Board of Trustees
Professor of Chemistry and Director of the Center for the Chemistry
of Integrated Systems (CCIS).
Stoddart was appointed by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth
II as a Knight Bachelor in her 2007 New Year’s Honours List, for services
to chemistry and molecular nanotechnology. In this same year, he
won the King Faisal International Prize in Science. In 2010,
he was the recipient of a Royal Medal, granted by Her Majesty,
and presented by Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
Fraser’s and Norma’s daughters, Fiona
(b. 1973) and Alison (b.1976) are both PhD chemists! In 2004,
Norma succumbed to a 12-year battle with breast cancer. Fiona lives
with her Australian husband and their two children in Belmont,
MA, while Alison, who is a Senior Editor with Nature Materials,
lives in Waterbeach, UK with her husband and their 3 sons. To
learn more about the life and works of Fraser Stoddart, read about “Big
and Little Meccano” in Tetrahedron 2008, 64,
8231–8263.