Odd Hassel
(17 May 1897 – 11 May 1981) was a Norwegian physical
chemist and Nobel
Prize Winner.Born in Kristiania , his parents were Ernst Hassel, a gynaecologist, and Mathilde Klaveness. In 1915, he entered the University
of Oslo where he studied mathematics, physics and chemistry, and graduated in 1920. After taking a year off from
studying, he went to Munich, Germany to
work in the laboratory of Professor Kasimir Fajans. His work there led to the detection of absorption indicators. After moving to Berlin, he worked at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute, where he began research on X-ray
crystallography. He furthered his research with a Rockefeller
Fellowship, obtained with the help of Fritz
Haber. In 1924, he obtained his PhD from the Berlin
University, before moving to his alma mater, the University
of Oslo, where he worked from 1925 through 1964. He became a professor in 1934.
His work
was interrupted in October, 1943 when he and other university staff members
were arrested by the Nasjonal Samling and handed over to the occupation
authorities. He spent time in several detention camps, until he was released in
November, 1944.
In
addition to the Nobel, he also received the Guldberg-Waage Medal
from the Norwegian Chemical Society and the Gunnerus
Medal from the Royal Norwegian Society of Science and Letters,
both in 1964. An annual lecture, named in his honor, is given at the University
of Oslo.
Hassel
originally focused on inorganic chemistry, but beginning in 1930 his work
concentrated on problems connected with molecular structure, particularly
the structure ofcyclohexane and its derivatives. He introduced the
Norwegian scientific community to the concepts of the electric dipole
moments and electron diffraction. The work for which he is best known
established the three-dimensionality
of molecular geometry. He focused his research on ring-shaped carbon molecules,
which he suspected filled three dimensions instead of two, the common belief of
the time. By using the number of bonds between the carbon and
hydrogen atoms, Hassel demonstrated the impossibility of the molecules existing
on only one plane. This discovery led to his being awarded the Nobel
Prize in Chemistry for 1969.
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