2013 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
The Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences has decided to award the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2013
to
Martin Karplus
Université de Strasbourg, France and Harvard University, Cambridge,
MA, USA
Michael Levitt
Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA
and
Arieh Warshel
University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
“for the development of multiscale models for complex chemical
systems”
The computer — your Virgil
in the world of atoms
Chemists used to create models of molecules
using plastic balls and sticks. Today, the modelling is carried out in
computers. In the 1970s, Martin Karplus, Michael Levitt and Arieh Warshel laid
the foundation for the powerful programs that are used to understand and
predict chemical processes. Computer models mirroring real life have become
crucial for most advances made in chemistry today.
Chemical reactions occur at lightning
speed. In a fraction of a millisecond, electrons jump from one atomic nucleus
to the other. Classical chemistry has a hard time keeping up; it is virtually
impossible to experimentally map every little step in a chemical process. Aided
by the methods now awarded with the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, scientists let
computers unveil chemical processes, such as a catalyst’s purification of
exhaust fumes or the photosynthesis in green leaves.
The work of Karplus, Levitt and Warshel is
ground-breaking in that they managed to make Newton’s classical physics work
side-by-side with the fundamentally different quantum physics. Previously,
chemists had to choose to use either or. The strength of classical physics was
that calculations were simple and could be used to model really large
molecules. Its weakness, it offered no way to simulate chemical reactions. For
that purpose, chemists instead had to use quantum physics. But such
calculations required enormous computing power and could therefore only be
carried out for small molecules.
This year’s Nobel Laureates in chemistry
took the best from both worlds and devised methods that use both classical and
quantum physics. For instance, in simulations of how a drug couples to its
target protein in the body, the computer performs quantum theoretical
calculations on those atoms in the target protein that interact with the drug.
The rest of the large protein is simulated using less demanding classical
physics.
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