- Richard H. Holm
Richard Hadley Holm (born
September 24 ,1933 inBoston ,Massachusetts ), also known as R. H. Holm, is an Americaninorganic chemist .Professor Holm received his Ph.D. from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1959 under the direction ofF. Albert Cotton . [ [http://www.chemistry.msu.edu/Genealogy/chem_gene.shtml Chemical genealogy] , Michigan State U. chemistry dept.] [ [http://library.stanford.edu/depts/swain/history/mosher/biography.html Stanford Chemistry Dept. History 1977–2000: Professors, Brief Biographical Summaries] , Stanford U.] After the completion of his degree, he joined the chemistry faculty atHarvard University . He has been on the faculties of theUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison , Massachusettes Institute of Technology, andStanford University . His current position is the Higgins Professor ofChemistry at Harvard University.His accomplishments have been honored with numerous
award s most notably the National Academy of Sciences Award in Chemical Sciences. [National Academy of Sciences. [http://www.nasonline.org/site/PageServer?pagename=AWARDS_chemical_sciences NAS Award in Chemical Sciences] . Accessed onOctober 18 ,2007 .] He is a member of National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Arts and Sciences.Professor Holm's research encompasses
synthetic ,structural , andreactivity aspects oftransition element chemistry . He is best known for the preparations of the first synthetic analogs of the active sites of iron-sulfur proteins. [citation|author=Herskovitz, T.; Averill, B. A.; Holm, R. H.; Ibers, J. A.; Phillips, W. D. and Weiher, J. F.|title=Structure and properties of a synthetic analogue of bacterial iron-sulfur proteins|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |year=1972|volume=69|issue=9|pages=2437–2441|url=http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/69/9/2437.] These discoveries were significant in the development ofbioinorganic chemistry . He continues his work in the field of iron-sulfur clusters today, examining the active sites of the enzymesnitrogenase andcarbon monoxide dehydrogenase . Additionally, his interests include thebiomimetic chemistry ofmolybdenum - andtungsten -containingoxo-transferase s.References
External links
* [http://bioinorg.harvard.edu/~rhhgroup/rhh.htm Holm research group] at Harvard.
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