Robert H. Crabtree

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Robert H. Crabtree
Born Robert Howard Crabtree
(1948-04-17)17 April 1948
London, England, UK
Nationality British/United States
Fields Chemistry
Institutions Yale University
Alma mater Brighton College, New College, Oxford, University of Sussex, Institut de Chimie des Substances Naturelles
Doctoral advisor Joseph Chatt
Other academic advisors Malcolm Green, Hugh Felkin
Known for Crabtree's catalyst, organometallic chemistry

Robert H. Crabtree (born 17 April 1948, London) is a British-American chemist. He is serving as Whitehead Professor of Chemistry at Yale University in the United States. He is a naturalized citizen of the United States.[1] Crabtree is particularly known for his work on "Crabtree's catalyst" for hydrogenations, and his textbook on organometallic chemistry.

Career

Robert Howard Crabtree studied at Brighton College (1959-1966), and earned a B.A. degree from New College, Oxford in 1970, studying under Malcolm Green. He received his Ph.D from the University of Sussex in 1973, studying under Joseph Chatt.[citation needed]

He performed postdoctoral research under Hugh Felkin at the Institut de Chimie des Substances Naturelles at Gif-sur-Yvette, near Paris. He was a postdoctoral fellow (1973-1975) and then attaché de recherche (1975-1977). At the end of that time he was chargé de recherche. In 1977 Crabtree took an assistant professorship in Inorganic Chemistry at Yale University. He served as associate professor from 1982-1985, and as full professor from 1985 until the present.[citation needed]

Awards and honors

Editorial positions and published works

  • The Organometallic Chemistry of the Transition Metals (5 editions)(ISBN 0-471-66256-9)
  • Inorganic Chemistry Section (editor) Encyclopedia of Inorganic Chemistry (1992-1994)
  • Associate Editor of New Journal of Chemistry (1998-2003)
  • Editor-in-chief of Comprehensive Organometallic Chemistry III (2004-present)
  • Editor-in-chief of Encyclopedia of Inorganic Chemistry (2004-present)
  • Board of regional editors of Science (2006-present)
  • Chemistry of the Transition Metals (2009)
  • Handbook of Green Chemistry - Green Catalysis (2009) (co-author)

References

  1. Yale Faculty webpage; accessed 21 September 2014
  2. http://ursula.chem.yale.edu/~crabtree/CV_May_08.pdf Yale Faculty webpage
  3. Chemical & Engineering News, 23 February 2009, "2009 ACS National Award Winners", p. 68

External links