Robin Perutz

Robin Perutz FRS (born December 1949, in Cambridge) is a professor of Inorganic Chemistry at the University of York, where he was formerly head of department between 2000 and 2004.[1][2] He is also the son of the Nobel Prize winner Max Perutz.

Robin Perutz
BornDecember 1949
Cambridge, UK
NationalityBritish
Alma mater
OccupationProfessor of Inorganic Chemistry
Parent(s)
  • Max Perutz (father)
  • Gisela Clara Mathilde Peiser (mother)

Perutz's research spans inorganic chemistry, photochemistry and catalysis. In particular his interests lie in the mechanistic details of homogeneous catalysis by transition metal complexes, and is responsible for many techniques used in the field that have enabled chemists to take a different approach to fundamental reactions and many industrial processes.[3]

Education

Perutz graduated from the University of Cambridge with a BA in Natural Sciences in 1971. He subsequently worked for his PhD alongside Professor Jim Turner FRS, initially in Cambridge and then at Newcastle University. His focus was on utilising photochemical metal carbonyl dissociation in low temperature matrices, producing seminal work on the interaction of Cr(CO)5 with ‘inert’ matrix hosts, including CH4 and Xe.[4]

Awards and distinctions

  • Fellow of the Royal Society (2010)
  • Franco-British Prize of the French Chemical Society (2009)
  • Sacconi Medal of Italian Chemical Society and Sacconi Foundation (2008)
  • President of Dalton Division of the Royal Society of Chemistry (2007-10)
  • Nyholm Medal and Lectureship of the Royal Society of Chemistry (2005)

Plenary and invited lectures

  • Plenary Lecture ACS Winter Fluorine Conference, Florida (January 2005)
  • Invited Lecture International Symposium on Photophysics and Photochemistry of Coordination Compounds, Hong Kong (July 2004)
  • Troisième Cycle Lecturer, Bern, Basel, Neuchatel & Lausanne, Switzerland (May 2003)

Equality and diversity

Perutz has been an advocate for women in science; the Chemistry Department at York became the first to win the Athena SWAN gold status, an award for good practice on women’s equality. He also supports STEM students with disabilities.[3]

gollark: Generally, web applications are programmed in things like Python, JavaScript, Ruby and (alas) PHP.
gollark: You could run the thing on the same server as your Minecraft server, but you can't host a webserver from ingame.
gollark: If you had a web backend for it, you could easily enough have other servers run their own webservers.
gollark: But if anyone *can* plug something in, it's exactly as secure as wireless, or actually less because you can access peripherals.
gollark: If nobody else has access to your cables they can't see the messages running on them, yes.

References

  1. Profile: Robin Perutz
  2. Research Interests
  3. "Robin Perutz | Royal Society". royalsociety.org. Retrieved 5 March 2020.
  4. Duckett, Simon B.; Nicasio, M. Carmen; Whittlesey, Michael K. (2 January 2020). "Breaking bonds over many timescales: in celebration of Robin Perutz's 70th birthday". Dalton Transactions. 49 (2): 254–255. doi:10.1039/C9DT90277E. ISSN 1477-9234. PMID 31833503.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.