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         Macdiarmid Alan G:     more books (15)
  1. Organometallic Compounds of the Group IV Elements: The Bond to Carbon
  2. Handbook of Polyelectrolytes and Their Applications (Vols 1-3) by Nalwa Hari Singh, Alan G. MacDiarmid, 2002-07
  3. THE BOND TO HALOGENS AND HALOGENOIDS (in 2 parts): Part II of II. Organometallic Compounds of the Group IV Elements Series, Volume 1. by Alan G. (Ed) MacDiarmid, 1968-01-01
  4. Bond to halogens and halogenoids by Alan G Macdiarmid, 1972
  5. Inorganic Syntheses, Vol. 17
  6. Organometallic Compounds the Group IV Elements the Bond to Halogens and Halogenoids by MacDiarmid Alan G., 1972-01-01
  7. The Bond to Carbon. Part 1 & 2.organometallic Compounds of the Group IV Elements Volune1&2 by MacDiarmid Alan G, 1968
  8. Bond to carbon by Alan G MacDiarmid, 1968
  9. The Bond to Carbon Volume 1 Parts 1 and 2 by Alan G. MacDiarmid, 1968
  10. The Bond to Halogens and Halogenoids -Part I of Volume 2of the Organometallic Compounds of the Group IV Elememts series by Alan G. -editor MacDiarmid, 1972
  11. Philadelphia Section Honors International Award Winner.(chemist Dr. Alan G. MacDiarmid wins Society of Plastics Engineers award)(Brief Article): An article from: Plastics Engineering by James P. Toner, 2001-05-01
  12. Alan G. MacDiarmid (German Edition)
  13. Bond To Carbon Volume 1 Part 1 of Organometa by Alan G Macdiarmid, 1968-01-01
  14. SPE INTERNATIONAL AWARDS are presented at ANTEC 2001.: An article from: Plastics Engineering

81. Die Preisträger
Translate this page So habe der Physiker in Santa Barbara eigens eine Firma für die nun von der nobel-Juryausgezeichneten elektrisch leitenden alan G. macdiarmid.
http://www.3sat.de/nano/news/10899/
...des Chemie-Nobelpreises 2000 Alan J. Heeger Alan J. Heeger
Alan G. MacDiarmid Alan G. MacDiarmid
Hideki Shirakawa Hideki Shirakawa
nano online / dpa

82. Nobel Prize In Chemistry - Wikipedia
http//www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/index.html. 1998 Walter Kohn, John A. Pople1999 Ahmed H. Zewail 2000 alan J Heeger, alan G macdiarmid, Hideki Shirakawa
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Prize/Chemistry
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Nobel Prize in Chemistry
(Redirected from Nobel Prize/Chemistry Winners of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry , listed by year of award in ascending order.
Jacobus Henricus van't Hoff Hermann Emil Fischer Svante August Arrhenius Sir William Ramsay ... Richard Adolf Zsigmondy The (Theodor) Svedberg Heinrich Otto Wieland Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus Arthur Harden Hans Karl August Simon von Euler-Chelpin ... Robert Curl , Sir Harold Kroto Richard Smalley Paul D. Boyer John E. Walker ... Koichi Tanaka
Source: http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/index.html
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It was last modified 18:30 Mar 13, 2003. All text is available under the terms of the

83. The University Of Pennsylvania Center For Technology Transfer
For the University of Pennsylvania, the glory of alan G. macdiarmid's sharing inthe nobel Prize in chemistry last week coincided with a more mundane fruit of
http://www.finance.upenn.edu/ctt/about_ctt/in_the_news_oct2000.shtml
About CTT > In the News
CTT in the News:
Nobel Laureate's Work May Yield Profit for PENN
Its Technology Transfer Unit Hopes to License his Method of Using PCs to create circuit boards and chips cheaply.
By Andrea Knox
The Philadelphia Inquirer
October 16, 2000
For the University of Pennsylvania, the glory of Alan G. MacDiarmid's sharing in the Nobel Prize in chemistry last week coincided with a more mundane fruit of his work; That was the prospect, at long last, for some practical use to be made of the electricity-conducting plastics he helped develop 25 years ago. Only weeks before the Nobel Prize announcement, Penn's Center for Technology Transfer had begun to seek venture capital for a process that MacDiarmid developed while tinkering with conducting polymers in his Penn lab. His invention is a revolutionary way to use a desktop computer and ordinary laser printer to make cheap, lightweight circuit boards and semiconductor chips. The circuits are designed on the computer, and printed on paper coated with a conducting polymer.

84. The 2000 Nobel Prize For Chemistry
The 2000 nobel Prize for Chemistry has been awarded to alan J. Heeger andalan G. macdiarmid of the United States and Hideki Shiraskawa of Japan.
http://www.riverdeep.net/current/2000/10/102300t_nobel.jhtml

This Week's Current
The Classroom Flyer Life Science Biology ... Sports October 23, 2000 The 2000 Nobel Prize for Chemistry The Nobel Foundation announces the winners of the annual Nobel prizes throughout the month of October. What is the connection between the physical phenomenon of electrical conductivity and this year's prize for chemistry? The 2000 Nobel Prize for Chemistry has been awarded to Alan J. Heeger and Alan G. MacDiarmid of the United States and Hideki Shiraskawa of Japan. The three discovered that plastic could be made to conduct electricity, in addition to its natural insulation properties. Their discovery in the 1970s was a breakthrough that has changed the way we use plastics today. Plastics have traditionally been used for insulation. According to the press release from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences: The prize-winning team developed conductive plastics that have been used in new color television screens and in "smart" windows that reflect sunlight. These conductive polymers can also reduce static electricity and interference on photographic film and computer screens. Semi-conductive polymers have been developed in light-emitting diodes, solar cells, and mobile phone displays. Many more applications of conductive plastics are expected to enter our daily lives.
Teaching the Problem The following SimLibrary activities require Logal Express. Get a

85. Pictures Of Nobel Laureates - Chemistry
This is an index of photographs of the winners of the nobel Prize in Chemistry. 2000 alan G. macdiarmid; 2000 - Hideki Shirakawa; 2001 - William S. Knowles;
http://chemistry.about.com/library/blchemists.htm
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Index of Pictures - Nobel Laureates in Chemistry This is an index of photographs of the winners of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

86. Bottomquark: Science And Technology News And Discussion
up is the nobel Prize for Chemistry and surprise, surprise, it's split three waysas well between alan J. Heeger, another UCSB guy, alan G macdiarmid of the
http://www.bottomquark.com/article.php?sid=722

87. Alan J. Heeger Winner Of The 2000 Nobel Prize In Chemistry
Scientists born after 1901 (submitted by Chinnappan Baskar); alan J.Heeger – nobel Lecture (submitted by Chinnappan Baskar). Back
http://almaz.com/nobel/chemistry/2000a.html
A LAN J H EEGER
2000 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
    for the discovery and development of conductive polymers.
Background

88. Gazette: The Boy Chemist At 75 (Mar/Apr 2002)
Well over a halfcentury and one nobel Prize later, Penn Professor alan G. MacDiarmidstillpossesses—and communicates to students—the energy and enthusiasm
http://www.upenn.edu/gazette/0302/giresi.html
The Boy Chemist at BY JOAN P. CAPUZZI GIRESI
PHOTOGRAPHY BY JIM GRAHAM
Most people Now in his eighth decade, long after most of us have learned all we ever will (or want to), MacDiarmid is still a little boy full of questions, his youthful mind a great, insatiable sponge. He delights in being stumped by an offbeat query from one of his chemistry students, and then searching for the answer. He keeps a notebook by his bed to record the nocturnal inspirations that race from his vigorous psyche. He teaches himself Mandarin Chinese and cell biology, both for the sake of his research.
continued

Mar/Apr Contents
Gazette Home The Pennsylvania Gazette Last modified 2/28/02

89. Fantasy Materializes For Penn Chemistry Professor
Fantasy materializes for Penn chemistry professor. alan G. MacDiarmidshares the 2000 nobel Prize for Chemistry with two collaborators.
http://www.lrsm.upenn.edu/lrsm/nobel/inquirer_art.html
Tuesday, October 10, 2000 Fantasy materializes for Penn chemistry professor Alan G. MacDiarmid shares the 2000 Nobel Prize for Chemistry with two collaborators. They developed polymers that conduct electricity, which have wide uses in computer and video displays. Alan G. MacDiarmid, shown in an undated file photo, shares the Nobel Prize for Chemistry with two collaborators. By Deborah Scoblionkov
REUTERS Alan G. MacDiarmid, who won the 2000 Nobel Prize for Chemistry today for developing polymer plastics that conduct electricity, likened his winning the award to gambling. "One always fantasizes. ... It's the same as going to a casino and hoping to win, but one never really expects one's fantasy to materialize," said MacDiarmid, 73, a chemistry professor at the University of Pennsylvania. He said that when he first heard the news from a colleague, who had seen it on the Internet, he didn't believe it. "My first reaction was that it was a hoax. I couldn't quite believe it," he told Reuters in a telephone interview.

90. LRSM Faculty Member: ALAN G. MACDIARMID
alan G. macdiarmid. Professor of Chemistry DESCRIPTION OF RESEARCHINTERESTS My research is directed to the study of conducting
http://www.lrsm.upenn.edu/lrsm/macdiarm.html

Faculty Directory
ALAN G. MACDIARMID
Professor of Chemistry
DESCRIPTION OF RESEARCH INTERESTS:
My research is directed to the study of conducting polymers, more commonly known as "synthetic metals". They are organic polymers that possess the electrical, electronic, magnetic and optical properties of a metal while retaining the mechanical properties, processibility etc., commonly associated with a conventional polymer. Their properties are intrinsic to a "doped" form of the polymer. The concept of doping is the unique, central characteristic which distinguishes conducting polymers from all other types of polymers. During the doping process, an organic polymer, either an insulator or semiconductor having a small conductivity, typically in the range of 10P10 to 10P5 S/cm, is converted to a polymer which is in the "metallic" regime (~1 to ~104 S/cm). The controlled addition of known, usually small ( <10%) and non-stoichiometric quantities of chemical species results in dramatic changes in the electronic, electrical, magnetic, optical and structural properties of the polymer. Doping is reversible to produce the original polymer with little or no degradation of the polymer backbone. Both doping and undoping processes, involving dopant counter ions which stabilize the doped state, may be carried out chemically or electrochemically. Since the discovery of conducting polymers at Penn in the mid-seventies, the field has expanded extremely rapidly world-wide. This has resulted both from the interdisciplinary nature of the field chemistry, electrochemistry, physics, electrical/electronic engineering and from the rapidly expanding technological interest in the field.

91. Palestinian-Israeli Clashes
Dr. Hideki Shirakawa, Dr. alan G. macdiarmid, Dr. alan G. macdiarmid. The NobelPrize in Chemistry was awarded yesterday to three scientists who created a
http://myhome.naver.com/leghorn/worldnews1011.htm
Television research team win Nobel prize( CNN
Nobel Prize in chemistry named( USA Today)
3 Men Vital to Internet Share Physics Prize
Russian scientist and Nobel Prize winner Zhores Alferov passes on his good news
Zhores I. Alferov Jack S. Kilby Herbert Kroemer

A team whose research led to improvements in the quality of television have received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry.
Americans Alan J. Heeger and Alan G. MacDiarmid and Hideki Shirakawa of Japan, won the prize on Tuesday for their discoveries that plastic can be made electrically conductive an advance that has led to improvements in film, TV screens and windows.
They will share the $915,000 prize for the "discovery and development of conductive polymers," according to the citation by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. The 2000 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to three scientists who developed electrical components that allow for fast communication using fiber optics and satellites, and that serve as the soul of the personal computer.
2000³â ³ëº§ ¹°¸®ÇлóÀº ±¤¼¶À¯¿Í À§¼ºÀ» ÅëÇØ °í¼Ó Åë½ÅÀ» °¡´ÉÄÉ ÇØÁÖ´Â ÀüÀÚ ÀåÄ¡¸¦ °³¹ßÇÑ °ø·Î·Î ¼¼ ¸íÀÇ °úÇÐÀÚ, Jack S. Kilby, Zhores I. Alferov, Herbert Kroemer

92. NATO SA: Newsletter, No. 55, December 2000
alan G. macdiarmid, of the University of Pennsylvania, USA, received theNobel Prize in Chemistry with alan J. Heeger and Hideki Shirakawa.
http://www.nato.int/science/e/newsletter/000303.htm
Issue No. 55, December 2000
NOBEL PRIZEWINNERS 2000
We are pleased to congratulate in particular three of this year's Nobel Prizewinners, who have received grants under the NATO Science Programme. Zhores I. Alferov, Director of the Ioffe Institute, St. Petersburg, Russia, received the Nobel Prize in Physics jointly with Herbert Kroemer and Jack Kilby. Prof. Alferov is currently co-director of the NATO Science for Peace-sponsored research project on Light Emitting Devices on GaAsN-GaN Double Heterostructures, which is being carried out in collaboration with colleagues in Germany, the UK and Belarus (see item on Belarus below). He was also co-director, with Dr. G. Bugliarello, USA, of a 1994 NATO Advanced Research Workshop on Human Resources and Leadership for Technology transfer between NATO countries and Partner Countries. The Swedish Academy noted that the 2000 Physics Prize was awarded to scientists and inventors whose work has laid the foundation of modern information technology. Prof. Alferov's contribution was in developing semi-conductor heterostructures used in high-speed- and opto-electronics. Alan G. MacDiarmid, of the University of Pennsylvania, USA, received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Alan J. Heeger and Hideki Shirakawa. They were awarded the Prize for the discovery and development of conductive polymers. Their discoveries led to the possibility of plastics, which are polymers, being used to conduct electricity, and this has led in turn to many industrial applications. In 1989 and 1992 Prof. MacDiarmid received a NATO grant for collaboration on Electronic Structure and Optical Phenomena in Polyanilines. His collaborators on that occasion were Prof. J.L. Bredas of Belgium and Prof. A.J. Epstein of the United States.

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