About Richard Schrock


Richard R. Schrock obtained his B. A. degree in 1967 from the University of California at Riverside and his Ph. D. degree from Harvard University in 1971. He spent one year as an NSF postdoctoral fellow at Cambridge University followed by three years at the Central Research and Development Department of E. I. duPont de Nemours and Company. In 1975 he moved to M.I.T. where he became full professor in 1980 and the Frederick G. Keyes Professor of Chemistry in 1989.

His interests include the inorganic and organometallic chemistry of high oxidation state early metal complexes (especially those that contain an alkyl, alkylidene, or alkylidyne ligand), c atalytic reactions and mechanisms of reactions involving alkyl or alkylidene complexes, especially olefin metathesis reactions, the chemistry of high oxidation state dinitrog en and related complexes, and the controlled synthesis of polymers prepared using well-defined organometallic initiators. He is perhaps best known for his discovery of "high oxidation state carbene" (alkylidene complexes) by alpha hydrogen abstraction in high oxidation state metal alkyl complexes. In the past few years he has applied alkylidene c hemistry toward the controlled polymerization of cyclic olefins via ring-opening-metathesis polymerization (ROMP) and the synthesis of polyenes through alkyne polymerization. He also has been studying asymmetric ring closing metathesis reactions and the development of triamido/amine ligands for the catalytic reduction of dinitrogen by molybdenum c omplexes at room temperature and pressure. Most recently he has been focussing on asymmetric olefin metathesis catalysts that are chiral at the metal by virtue of four diffe rent M-L bonds.

R. R. Schrock has been an Alfred P. Sloan Fellow and a Camille and Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar. He has received the ACS Award in Organometallic Chemistry (1985), the Harrison Howe Award o f the Rochester ACS section (1990), an Alexander von Humboldt Award (1995), the ACS Award in Inorganic Chemistry (1996), the Bailar Medal from the University of Illinois (199 8), and an ACS Cope Scholar Award in 2001. He was the Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson Lecturer and Medalist (2002) and the Sir Edward Frankland Prize Lecturer (2004), has received the F. Albert Cotton Award in Synthetic Inorganic Chemistry (2006), the Theodore Richards Medal from the Northeast ACS section (2006), the August Wilhelm von Hofmann Medal from t he German Chemical Society (2005), and the Basolo Medal (2007), and in 2005 shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Y. Chauvin and R. H. Grubbs. He has been elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the National Academy of Sciences, and is a Foreign Member of the Royal Society (London). He was Associate Editor of Organometallics for eight years and has published more than 480 research papers.

 
Last updated 10/01/2008 Macall Coombs
Copyright 2001 Richard Schrock / The Schrock Group, MIT