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German wins
Nobel Prize in chemistry
STOCKHOLM (Sweden)—Gerhard Ertl of Germany won the 2007 Nobel Prize in
chemistry on Wednesday for studies of chemical reactions on solid
surfaces, which are key to understanding questions like why the ozone
layer is thinning.
Ertl’s research laid the foundation of modern surface chemistry, which
has helped explain how fuel cells work, how catalytic converters clean
up car exhaust and even why even why iron rusts, the Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences said. Ertl, who won the prize on his 71st birthday,
told reporters that it “is the best birthday present that you can give
to somebody.” “I am speechless,” Ertl told The Associated Press from his
office in Berlin. “I was not counting on this.”
The academy said Ertl provided a detailed description of how chemical
reactions take place on surfaces and studied some of the most
fundamental mysteries in that field.
Ertl showed how to obtain reliable results in this difficult area of
research, and his findings applied in both academic studies and
industrial development, the academy said. “Surface chemistry can even
explain the destruction of the ozone layer as vital steps in the
reaction actually take place on the surfaces of small crystals of ice in
the stratosphere,” the award citation said.—Agencies
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