Click chemistry’ and quantum weirdness: What are this year’s Nobel Prizes all about? – Euronews

Groundbreaking discoveries in the fields of click chemistry and quantum mechanics have been awarded this years prestigious Nobel Prizes in Chemistry and Physics, with three scientists per field jointly receiving recognition for their individual work.

But what does their research tell us about the world we live in, and how did they change it?

While most people have the utmost respect for Nobel Prize winners, its also true that a majority of us may not have the knowledge to immediately grasp why the scientific results, recognised by the Swedish Academy who judge the prizes, have the potential to change our lives.

We tried to explain it as simply as possible.

John Clauser, Alain Aspect and Anton Zeilinger were jointly awarded this years Nobel Prize in Physics for their independent work on quantum weirdness.

The three all studied the entanglement of photons, the behaviour of two subatomic particles of light which act like a single unit even when not physically linked and separated by a large distance.

Even when apart, what happens to one of the two particles influences what happens to the other.

This phenomenon was dubbed spooky action at a distance by arguably the most influential physicist in history, Albert Einstein.

Though the idea of quantum entanglement, or weirdness, was theoretically developed in the 1960s by Northern Irish physicist John Stewart Bell, it had not been proven before Clauser, Aspect and Zeilingers experiments.

It turned out that the spookiness Einstein spoke of is definitely there - and it could be used to our benefit.

Quantum mechanics might sound rather abstract and far away from other daily lives, but its closer than we might think.

The trios entanglement research could be applied to quantum computers, promising a change in the way we use artificial intelligence to solve complex problems, such as world hunger and the climate crisis, as well as for encryption, making it harder for someone to hack private communications.

This years Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to the groundbreaking research of scientists Carolyn Bertozzi, Morten Meldal and Barry Sharpless, who discovered reactions that let molecules snap together like Lego pieces to create new compounds.

Explained in such terms, click chemistry - the field studying the way molecules can be linked together - sounds rather simple. Its far from it.

Click chemistry is a field of study in which molecular building blocks snap together quickly and efficiently, forming new complicated molecules.

Sharpless, who has just received his second Nobel Prize in Chemistry, laid the foundation of this new form of chemistry and coined its name around the year 2000.

Where linking molecules together is an extremely complex operation, click reactions are very fast, clean and reliable and dont produce unwanted side products. Instead of taking place in harmful solvents, the reactions are made inside water.

Shortly afterwards, Meldal and Sharpless both independently discovered the copper catalysed azide-alkyne cycloaddition, a mouthful of words that indicate a chemical reaction now widely used in chemistry and which has created its own branch of synthetic chemistry.

Bertozzi then took click chemistry to a new level, according to the Swedish Academy, developing click reactions that work inside living organisms - what she called bioorthogonal reactions - in 2004.

These click reactions, which dont require copper, take place without disrupting the normal biochemistry of the cell.

Bertozzis bioorthogonal reactions have given us invaluable insight into the working of tumour cells, how they develop and evade our immune system, as well as offering us ways to track these cancerous cells.

But theres something inherent to click chemistry that is revolutionary in chemistry: this form of chemistry is environmentally friendly. Unlike other chemical creations, click chemistry avoids creating harmful waste and byproducts which would be expensive and hard to dispose of.

Beyond cancer research and treatments, click chemistry has been used to produce antimicrobials, herbicides, diagnostic tests, corrosion retardants and brightening agents.

Bertozzi becomes only the eighth woman to receive the chemistry prize in Nobel history, joining the likes of Marie Curie, Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin and Ada E Yonath.

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Click chemistry' and quantum weirdness: What are this year's Nobel Prizes all about? - Euronews

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