Karl Barry Sharpless


Karl Barry Sharpless is an American chemist and Nobel Laureate known for his work on stereoselective reactions and click chemistry.

Early life and education

Sharpless was born April 28, 1941, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He graduated from Friends' Central School in 1959, and continued his studies at Dartmouth College, earning an A.B. in 1963 and a Ph.D. in chemistry from Stanford University in 1968. He continued post-doctoral work at Stanford University and Harvard University.

Academic career

Sharpless was a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Stanford University. He has held the W. M. Keck professorship in chemistry at The Scripps Research Institute since 1990.

Research

Sharpless developed stereoselective oxidation reactions, and showed that the formation of an inhibitor with femtomolar potency can be catalyzed by the enzyme acetylcholinesterase, beginning with an azide and an alkyne. He discovered several chemical reactions which have transformed asymmetric synthesis from science fiction to the relatively routine, including aminohydroxylation, dihydroxylation, and the Sharpless asymmetric epoxidation.
In 2001 he won a half-share of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on chirally catalysed oxidation reactions. The other half of the year's Prize was shared between William S. Knowles and Ryōji Noyori.
His group has also successfully epoxidized a C-86 Buckminster Fullerene ball, employing p-Cresol as solvent.
The term "click chemistry" was coined by Sharpless in 1998, and was first fully described by Sharpless, Hartmuth Kolb, and M.G. Finn at The Scripps Research Institute in 2001. This involves a set of highly selective, exothermic reactions which occur under mild conditions; the most successful example is the azide alkyne Huisgen cycloaddition to form 1,2,3-triazoles.

Awards and honors

Sharpless was a recipient of the 2001 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on "chirally catalysed oxidation reactions".
In 2019, Sharpless was awarded the Priestley medal, the American Chemical Society's highest honor, for “the invention of catalytic, asymmetric oxidation methods, the concept of click chemistry and development of the copper-catalyzed version of the azide-acetylene cycloaddition reaction.”.
He holds honorary degrees from the KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Technical University of Munich, Catholic University of Louvain and Wesleyan University.

Personal life

Sharpless married Jan Dueser in 1965 and they have three children. He was blinded in one eye during a lab accident in 1970, shortly after he arrived at MIT as an assistant professor.