Ei-ichi Negishi (根岸 英一, Negishi Eiichi, born July 14, 1935) is a Japanese
chemist who has spent most of his career at
Purdue University, United States. He is best known for his discovery of the
Negishi coupling.
He was awarded the 2010
Nobel Prize in Chemistry "for
palladium catalyzed cross couplings in
organic synthesis" jointly with
Richard F. Heck and
Akira Suzuki.
Negishi was born in
Hsinking, the capital of the
Manchukuo, now
Changchun of China. He brought up in
Seoul, at that time the capital of
Japanese-colonial Korea, now the capital of
Republic of Korea. He graduated from the
University of Tokyo in 1958, and did his internship at
Teijin. He went on to study in the United States and obtained his PhD from
University of Pennsylvania in 1963 under the supervision of professor Allan R. Day.
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In 1966, He became a postdoctoral researcher at
Purdue University, and became assistant professor in 1968, working with Nobel laureate
Herbert C. Brown. In 1972, he went on to become associate professor at
Syracuse University where, in 1979, he was promoted to professor. In the same year, he went back to Purdue University.
In 2000, he was awarded the
Royal Society of Chemistry's Sir Edward Frankland Prize Lectureship.
In 2011, he was awarded the honorary doctor of science degree from the University of Pennsylvania.
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