DutchNews, October 5,
2016
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| Photo: via Hollandse Hoogte, Henrik Montgomery/ TT via AP |
Sparks of delight flew as Dutch scientist Ben
Feringa jointly won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry on Wednesday for his work in
creating miniscule motors.
The 65-year-old professor from the University of
Groningen and chairman of the scientific board at the Royal Netherlands Academy
of Arts and Sciences, told NPO Radio 1 he was ebullient.
‘This is the dream of
every scientist, and I can’t deny I also dreamed about it,’ he said, reports
NOS. ‘There are tens of thousands of good chemists, so it is a great surprise
to be selected. It is very moving, and I did get emotional.’
The prize was
shared with the French scientist Jean-Pierre Sauvage, and Scotsman Sir Fraser
Stoddart, for work in developing ‘the world’s smallest machines’ that paved the
way for the first smart materials.
They will share an award of 8 million
Swedish kronor (approximately €830,000).
In 2011, Feringa created the first
synthetic motor, a tiny device that keeps turning in response to light. He
added: ‘I often feel like the Wright brothers, who built the first primitive
plane. Nobody knew exactly what to do with it.’
But, NOS reports, scientists
hope it may have applications in finding and neutralising cancer cells or in
delivering insulin to people with diabetes.
#UPDATE Trio win Nobel Chemistry Prize for tiny molecular machines https://t.co/5iNRZqZJnl pic.twitter.com/Tx6K4OzbzO— AFP news agency (@AFP) October 5, 2016
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