Theodora Greene

Theodora Whatmough Greene (19 November 1931 – 14 July 2005) was a chemist, most well known for authoring the book Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis,[1][2] which summarises the use of protecting groups in organic synthesis.

Theodora Whatmough Greene
Born1931
Boston
Died2005
NationalityUnited States
Spouse(s)Frederick Greene
Children4
Scientific career
Doctoral advisorEJ Corey

Early life and education

Theodora Whatmough was born in Boston in 1931. She completed a bachelor’s degree at Radcliffe College and followed by a master’s degree at Harvard. In 1953, she married fellow chemist Frederick Greene, with whom she had four children.

Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis

In 1975, at the age of 44, Greene returned to science to undertake a PhD under the supervision of EJ Corey. She received her PhD on 5 June 1980 whereupon she adapted her thesis into a book, Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis (John Wiley & Sons), published in 1981 and co-authored with Peter G. M. Wuts. Protective Groups, now in its fifth edition, has found its place as a common reference textbook in organic chemistry labs, where it is used as a guide for the selection of protecting groups.

gollark: I mean, it's still probably small enough to fit on a cheap USB stick.
gollark: Epigenetic whatever?
gollark: I think I have Minecraft worlds bigger than a human genome somewhere.
gollark: Wikipedia says "3,100 Mbp (mega-basepairs) per haploid genome6,200 Mbp total (diploid).", so that seems right.
gollark: How long is human DNA? A few gigabytes?

References

  1. Katrina Krämer (11 February 2020). "Theodora Greene's protecting groups". Royal Society of Chemistry. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  2. Peter G. M. Wuts Theodora W. Greene (2006). Greene's Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis, Fourth Edition. John Wiley & Sons.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.