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  1. sco.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ryōji_NoyoriRyōji Noyori - Wikipedia

    Ryōji Noyori (野依 良治, Noyori Ryōji, born September 3, 1938) is a Japanese chemist. References [ eedit | eedit soorce ] ↑ "Fellowship of the Royal Society 1660-2015" .

  2. Ryoji Noyori is a Nobel Prize-winning chemist who added functional control to the organic synthesis technique of asymmetric hydrogenation, using complexes of rhodium and ruthenium as catalysts. Ryoji invented an organometallic catalytic compound, called the BINAP ligand, now used in research laboratories and industry worldwide.

  3. Ryōji Noyori was a naughty schoolboy. In 1949 at age 11. 2. Ryōji Noyori was a black-belt “judo” expert. At a high school in Kobe, Japan in 1956. 3. Nozaki group of Kyoto University in 1964.

  4. Ryōji Noyori ( Jepun: 野依 良治, Hepburn: Noyori Ryōji, lahir 3 September 1938) ialah ahli kimia Jepun . Beliau memenangi Hadiah Nobel dalam Kimia pada tahun 2001, Noyori berkongsi satu pertiga daripada hadiah dengan William S. Knowles untuk mengkaji hidrogenasi berpemangkinnya; hadiah ketiga ke K. Barry Sharpless untuk kajiannya dalam ...

  5. K. Barry Sharpless. Prize share: 1/2. The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2001 was divided, one half jointly to William S. Knowles and Ryoji Noyori "for their work on chirally catalysed hydrogenation reactions" and the other half to K. Barry Sharpless "for his work on chirally catalysed oxidation reactions". To cite this section.

  6. Leben. Ryōji Noyori wurde in Kōbe als Sohn von Kaneshi und Suzuko Noyori geboren, wo er die der Universität Kōbe angegliederte Grundschule besuchte. Er wechselte danach zur Nada-Mittel- und Oberschule. Sein Vater, durch den er schon früh mit der Chemie in Berührung kam, war Forschungsdirektor in der Chemischen Industrie.

  7. Ryōji Noyori is a Japanese chemist. He won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2001, Noyori shared a third of the prize with William S. Knowles for the study of chirally catalyzed hydrogenations; the second third of the prize went to K. Barry Sharpless for his study in chirally catalyzed oxidation reactions.