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Akira Suzuki (鈴木章,?) (Mukawa, Hokkaidō, 12 de septiembre de 1930) es un químico japonés. Suzuki recibió en 2010 junto con Richard Heck y Ei-ichi Negishi el Premio Nobel de Química. [1]
Akira Suzuki (鈴木 章, Suzuki Akira, born September 12, 1930) is a Japanese chemist and Nobel Prize Laureate (2010), who first published the Suzuki reaction, the organic reaction of an aryl- or vinyl-boronic acid with an aryl- or vinyl-halide catalyzed by a palladium(0) complex, in 1979.
Biographical. I was born on September 12, 1930, in Mukawa – a small town in Hokkaido, Japan. I attended primary school there and entered a secondary school in Tomakomai, which is home to one of the biggest paper companies in Japan. At high school, I was interested in mathematics.
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3 de may. de 2024 · Suzuki Akira (born September 12, 1930, Mukawa-chō, Japan) is a Japanese chemist who was awarded the 2010 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for his work in using palladium as a catalyst in producing organic molecules. He shared the prize with fellow Japanese chemist Negishi Ei-ichi and American chemist Richard F. Heck.
Akira Suzuki is a fashion-conscious Nobel laureate. He comes into the studio, closes the buttons of his jacket and insists: „Only pictures with my glasses on! Without them, it's not me!“
Telephone interview with Akira Suzuki following the announcement of the 2010 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 6 October 2010. The interviewer is Adam Smith, Editor-in-Chief of Nobelprize.org.