My Life in the Golden Age of Chemistry :More Fun Than Fun

Publication subTitle :More Fun Than Fun

Author: Cotton   F. Albert  

Publisher: Elsevier Science‎

Publication year: 2014

E-ISBN: 9780128013380

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780128012161

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9780128012161

Subject: O61 Inorganic Chemistry

Language: ENG

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Description

A giant in the field and at times a polarizing figure, F. Albert Cotton’s contributions to inorganic chemistry and the area of transitions metals are substantial and undeniable. In his own words, My Life in the Golden Age of Chemistry: More Fun than Fun describes the late chemist’s early life and college years in Philadelphia, his graduate training and research contributions at Harvard with Geoffrey Wilkinson, and his academic career from becoming the youngest ever full professor at MIT (aged 31) to his extensive time at Texas A&M. Professor Cotton’s autobiography offers his unique perspective on the advances he and his contemporaries achieved through one of the most prolific times in modern inorganic chemistry, in research on the then-emerging field of organometallic chemistry, metallocenes, multiple bonding between transition metal atoms, NMR and ESR spectroscopy, hapticity, and more. Working during a time of generous government funding of science and strong sponsorship for good research, Professor Cotton’s experience and observations provide insight into this prolific and exciting period of chemistry.

  • Offers personal and often wry perspective from this prominent chemist and recipient of some of science’s highest honors: the U.S. National Medal of Science (1982), the Priestley Medal (the American Chemical Society's highest recognition, 1998), membership in the U. S. National Academy of Sciences and corresponding international bodies, and 29 honorary doc

Chapter

High School (Jr. and Sr.) Years

College Days

Chapter 2: Harvard Years

A Summer at Los Alamos, 1952

The Pace of Research Quickens

My First Trip to Europe

Back to Harvard

Chapter 3: MIT 1955–60

Chapter 4: MIT 1961–71

The Sporting Life: Horses and Hounds

A Visit to Argentina

A Pleasant Sojourn in New York City

Calm Before the Storm

Goodbye to MIT

Chapter 5: MIT 1961–71: Mostly About Science

The Discovery of the Quadruple Bond

Infrared Spectra of Metal Carbonyls

Fluxional Organometallic Molecules

An Enzyme Structure — Staph Nuclease

Chapter 6: Yee Ha! Off to Texas

The Discovery of Agostic Interactions

More Metal—Metal Multiple Bonds

Collaboration with Malcolm Chisholm

The Rise and Decline of the Crystal Structure Industry

My First Visit to Israel and the Chemistry It Led To

My Adventure in Iran

The French Connection(s)

A Meeting in Southern Bavaria

Chapter 7: Good Times in the 1980s

A Fiasco of My Own Making

The National Medal of Science

The National Science Board

The Superconducting Supercollider

Chapter 8: From 1990 to the End of the Millennium

Other Activities During the 1990s

Chapter 9: The New Millenium

Chapter 10: More About People

Meeting Famous People

Secretaries

Jack Lewis

Earl Muetterties

Geoffrey Wilkinson

Derek Barton

Rick Adams

Carlos Murillo

Larry Falvello

Achim Müller

Herbert Roesky

Wolfgang Herrmann

Joseph Chatt

Fausto Calderazzo

Chapter 11: A Concluding Miscellany

Writing Books

Industrial Consulting

Changing Times at Texas A&M University

Animals

Some Recollections of Travel

Foreign Students

Three Golden Rules

Epilogue

Appendices

Appendix A: Ph.D. Students

Appendix B: Postdoctorals

Appendix C: Visitors

Appendix D: Priestly Lecture, 1998: Science Today — What Follows The Golden Age

Appendix E: Publications

Appendix F: Some Former Ph.D. Students

Index

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