From: Prof. Gareth Morris,
University of Manchester
Sent: Monday, October 21, 2013 6:07 AM
The Russell Varian Lecture and Prize
The Russell Varian prize honors the memory of the
pioneer behind the first commercial Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
spectrometers and co-founder of Varian Associates. The prize is awarded
to a researcher based on a single innovative contribution (a single
paper, patent, lecture, or piece of hardware) that has proven of high
and broad impact on state-of-the-art NMR technology. The prize is
designed to recognize the initial contribution that laid the foundations
for a specific technology of great importance in state-of-the-art NMR.
It is sponsored by Agilent Technologies and currently carries a monetary
award of 15,000 Euro. The award ceremony will take place at the ICMRBS
2014 meeting in Dallas, Texas, USA, 24th to 29th August, 2014, with the
winner delivering the Russell Varian Lecture.
Rules for the Russell Varian Prize
- Only single pieces of work are considered (a paper, a lecture, a patent, etc).
- In the case of multiple authorship, the prize is
awarded to the author with the largest creative and innovative share of
the contribution. In the exceptional case of truly equal shares in the
contribution, the Prize may be split between two authors.
- No individual may receive the prize more than once.
- Prizewinners become members of the Advisory Board
for the Russell Varian Prize that evaluates future nominations and
makes recommendations to the Prize Committee.
Call for Nominations
Nominations must be forwarded by email to the Secretary of the Prize Committee, Gareth Morris, at g.a.morris@manchester.ac.uk.
The deadline for nominations is February 17th, 2014. Nominations should
be laid out in the format of a publishable laudatio proposal (cf.
earlier laudatios below, or at http://www.chem.agilent.com/en-US/products-services/Instruments-Systems/Nuclear-Magnetic-Resonance/Pages/varian-prize-winners.aspx)
that in the case of multiple authorship must include an explanation of
why the nominee is the most innovative author behind the paper.
Attention is further drawn to the fact that the Russell Varian prize
rewards the earliest seed paper of an important technology, rather than
later more comprehensive and highly cited papers.
Prize Committee
Jean Jeener (Chairman), Krish Krishnamurthy
(Agilent representative), Lucio Frydman, Gareth A. Morris (Secretary),
Ole W. Sørensen, and a representative of the ICMRBS organizing
committee.
Advisory Board for the Russell Varian Prize
Weston Anderson, Nicolaas Bloembergen, Ray Freeman, Erwin Hahn, Alex Pines, Alfred G. Redfield, Martin Karplus, John S. Waugh.
Former Russell Varian Prize Laureates
Jean Jeener, Professor Emeritus, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium (2002):
- Technology: Multidimensional Fourier NMR spectroscopy and imaging
- Awarded Contribution: The lecture given at the
Ampere Summer School in Basko Polje, Yugoslavia, September, 1971, where
Jean Jeener introduced two-dimensional Fourier NMR spectroscopy by what
is today known as the COSY experiment.
Erwin Hahn, Professor Emeritus, University of California, Berkeley, USA (2004):
- Technology: Basics of modern time-domain NMR
spectrometers, spin-echo phenomena and experiments, diffusion
measurements, and J couplings
- Awarded Contribution: Bull. Am. Phys. Soc. 24, No. 7, 13 (1949), reprinted in Phys. Rev. 77, 746 (1950).
Nicolaas Bloembergen, Professor of optical
sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA, and Gerhard Gade
University Professor Emeritus, Division of Applied Science and Physics
Department, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts USA (2005):
- Technology: NMR relaxation for experimental study of molecular motion
- Awarded Contribution: Nuclear Magnetic
Relaxation, by N. Bloembergen, E. M. Purcell, and R. V. Pound, Nature,
160, 475-476, (1947).
John S. Waugh, Professor emeritus, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA (2006):
- Technology: Average Hamiltonian Theory
- Awarded Contribution: J.S. Waugh, C.H. Wang, L.M.
Huber, and R.L. Vold, “Multiple-Pulse NMR Experiments”, J. Chem. Phys.
48, 662-670 (1968). This paper announces further results that appeared a
few weeks later in J. S. Waugh, L. M. Huber, and U. Haeberlen,
"Approach to High-Resolution NMR in Solids", Phys. Rev. Lett. 20,
180-182 (1968).
Alfred G. Redfield, Professor Emeritus of
Physics, Biochemistry, and Rosenstiel Basic Medical Sciences Research
Center, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA (2007):
- Technology: Relaxation Theory
- Awarded Contribution: A.G. Redfield, “On the
Theory of Relaxation Processes”, IBM Journal of Research and Development
1, 19-31 (1957). Recent references to this fundamental paper are often
given implicitly by quoting the revised version published by Redfield in
Adv. Magn. Reson. 1, 1-32 (1965).
Alexander Pines, Glenn T. Seaborg
Professor of Chemistry, UC Berkeley, and Senior Scientist, Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, USA (2008):
- Technology: Cross-polarization method for NMR in solids
- Awarded Contribution: A. Pines, M. G. Gibby, and
J. S. Waugh, “Proton-Enhanced Nuclear Induction Spectroscopy. A
Method for High Resolution NMR of Dilute Spins in Solids”, J. Chem.
Phys. 56, 1776-1777 (1972).
Albert W. Overhauser, Stuart Distinguished Professor of Physics, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA (2009):
- Technology: Nuclear Overhauser Effect
- Awarded Contribution: The talk given by Albert
Overhauser at the American Physical Society meeting on May 1, 1953, of
which an abstract appeared as Albert W. Overhauser, Polarization
of Nuclei in Metals, Phys. Rev. 91, 476 (1953), and full detail as
Albert W. Overhauser, Polarization of Nuclei in Metals, Phys. Rev. 92,
411-415 (1953).
Martin Karplus, Professor Emeritus,
Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Harvard University,
Cambridge, Massachusetts; and Laboratoire de Chimie Biophysique, ISIS,
Université Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg, France (2010):
- Technology: Karplus Equation
- Awarded contribution: M. Karplus, “Contact
Electron-Spin Coupling of Nuclear Magnetic Moments“, J. Chem. Phys. 30,
11-15 (1959).
Gareth Alun Morris, Professor of Physical Chemistry, School of Chemistry, The University of Manchester, UK (2011):
- Technology: INEPT pulse sequence
- Awarded contribution: G. A. Morris and R.
Freeman: “Enhancement of nuclear magnetic resonance signals by
polarization transfer”, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 101, 760-762 (1979).
Raymond Freeman, John Humphrey Plummer
Professor of Magnetic Resonance (Emeritus), Department of Chemistry,
University of Cambridge, UK and Weston A. Anderson, Senior Principal
Scientist and Varian Fellow Emeritus (2012):
- Technology: Double Resonance
- Awarded contribution: R. Freeman and W.A.
Anderson: “Use of Weak Perturbing Radio-Frequency Fields in Nuclear
Magnetic Double Resonance”, J. Chem. Phys. 37, 2053-2074 (1962).
Lucio Frydman, Professor and Kimmel Fellow, Weizmann Institute, Chemical Physics Department, Israel (2013):
- Technology: Ultrafast NMR
- Awarded contribution: L. Frydman, T. Scherf and
A. Lupulescu: “The acquisition of multidimensional NMR spectra within a
single scan”, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 99, 15858-15862 (2002).
Laudatio 2002
Awarded Contribution:
The lecture given at the Ampere Summer School in Basko Polje,
Yugoslavia, September, 1971, where Jean Jeener introduced
two-dimensional Fourier NMR spectroscopy by what is today known as the
COSY experiment. The unpublished lecture notes were later published in
“NMR and More in Honour of Anatole Abragam”, Eds. M. Goldman and M.
Porneuf, Les editions de physique, Avenue du Hoggar, Zone Industrielle
de Courtaboeuf, BP 112, F-91944 Les Ulis cedex A, France (1994).
The Prize Winner:
Jean Jeener, Professor Emeritus, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
The Technology:
The awarded contribution introduced two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy and
has shown an unprecedented impact on the development of
state-of-the-art NMR spectroscopy. In principle, any
multiple-dimensional NMR experiment introduced so far relies on the
method proposed by Jean Jeener. Countless examples can be found in both
liquid-state and solid-state NMR, as well as in NMR imaging applications
in medicine, biology and material science.
Laudatio 2004
Awarded Contribution:
E. L. Hahn, Spin Echoes, Bull. Am. Phys. Soc. 24, No. 7, 13 (1949),
reprinted in Phys. Rev. 77, 746 (1950). (This is the abstract for a ten
minutes presentation to be given at the Chicago meeting of the American
Physical Society on November 25, 1949.)
The Prize Winner:
Erwin L. Hahn, Professor Emeritus, University of California, Berkeley, USA
The Technology:
The awarded contribution contains several original ideas and results
that have had a strong impact on modern NMR technology, notably
- (a) the two pulse spin echo that still is the method of choice for
e.g. refocusing chemical shift dephasings in pulse sequences, not
to mention widespread applications in MRI;
- (b) the interpretation of spin echoes, where time (rather than
frequency) is used as the essential variable beyond the initial stage of
Bloch's theory of CW spectroscopy and of relaxation measurements: this
spin dynamics method was immediately essential for the development of
spin echo applications, and it is still today the theoretical approach
used for most NMR techniques;
- (c) the experimental demonstration that the observation of NMR pulse
responses is a viable technology that can provide higher sensitivity
than CW spectroscopy.
The awarded contribution clearly was the foundation for the more
extensive description of spin echoes in E. L. Hahn, Spin Echoes, Phys.
Rev. 80, 580-594 (1950), that was submitted six months after the lecture
at the Chicago meeting, where further high-impact ideas related to spin
echoes were presented:
- (d) the study of molecular diffusion and bulk motion by observation of
their effects on the spin echoes: with minor modifications, this is
still the method of choice for accurate measurements of molecular
diffusion coefficients in liquids and for flow measurements in general;
- (e) the study of "secondary" spin echoes after three pulses, another step towards multiple-pulse techniques;
- (f) the observation of a modulation of the peak spin echo amplitudes
in some homonuclear spin systems and the conclusion that the modulation
cannot be explained by differences in chemical shifts, hence that it
indicates a new spin-spin coupling not averaged out by molecular motion.
This proved later to be J couplings. It also showed that multiple-pulse
spectroscopy provides important qualitative information that was not
directly available by CW techniques;
- (g) the description and use of a coherent pulse spectrometer including
a CW reference oscillator at the NMR frequency, hence control of the
phase of the pulses and observation of the phase of the spin responses:
the basic elements of modern pulse spectrometers are presented here for
the first time.
Laudatio 2005
Awarded Contribution:
Nuclear Magnetic Relaxation, by N. Bloembergen, E. M. Purcell, and R. V. Pound, Nature, 160, 475-476, (1947).
This paper contains all the essential ideas and results that were later
described in greater detail in Bloembergen's PhD thesis (Leiden, 1948)
and in the "BPP" paper, N. Bloembergen, E. M. Purcell, and R. V. Pound,
Relaxation Effects in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Absorption, Phys. Rev.
73, 679-712 (1948). A preliminary report was given by Bloembergen as a
Contributed Paper at the APS meeting in New York in late January 1947
(N. Bloembergen, R. V. Pound, and E. M. Purcell, The Width of the
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Absorption in Gases, Liquids, and Solids,
Phys. Rev. 71, 466 (1947)).
The Prize Winner:
Nicolaas Bloembergen, Professor of optical sciences,
University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA, and Gerhard Gade University
Professor Emeritus, Division of Applied Science and Physics Department,
Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts USA
The Technology:
The awarded paper proposed a semi-quantitative prediction for Bloch's
relaxation times T1 and T2, based on an appropriate adaptation of
transition probability theory (as originally presented by Weisskopf and
Wigner) combined with the assumption that relaxation is dominated by the
effects of molecular Brownian motion on a "fluctuating local field"
acting on each spin. The paper introduced the notion of "motional
narrowing" and established NMR as an essential tool for the experimental
study of molecular motion, a situation that still persists today.
Laudatio 2006
Awarded Contribution:
J.S. Waugh, C.H. Wang, L.M. Huber, and R.L. Vold, “Multiple-Pulse NMR
Experiments”, J. Chem. Phys. 48, 662-670 (1968). This paper announces
further results that appeared a few weeks later in J. S. Waugh, L. M.
Huber, and U. Haeberlen, "Approach to High-Resolution NMR in Solids",
Phys. Rev. Lett. 20, 180-182 (1968).
The Prize Winner:
John S. Waugh, Professor emeritus, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
The Technology:
The awarded paper is the seed for multi-pulse line-narrowing, coherent
averaging, and Average Hamiltonian Theory (AHT) in solid-state NMR
spectroscopy. The version of AHT proposed in the awarded contribution
unlocked the whole field of multiple pulse line narrowing in solid-state
NMR by providing an efficient systematic tool for the analysis, design,
and optimization of such schemes. Almost immediately, the first
application of the new idea by Waugh was the WAHUHA sequence for
homonuclear line narrowing in solids, which started the successful
development of high-resolution NMR in solids for chemical and structural
applications (beyond the preliminary results of broader and often
unresolved lines obtained with MAS alone). AHT is the method of choice
to understand or design many solid-state pulse sequences like homo- and
heteronuclear decoupling experiments, often in combination with
magic-angle spinning, dipolar recoupling experiments, and advanced
experiments for quadrupolar nuclei. In liquid-state NMR, AHT was
essential for the breakthrough of designing the first coherent
multi-pulse decoupling schemes and TOCSY-type elements.
Laudatio 2007
Awarded Contribution:
A.G. Redfield, “On the Theory of Relaxation Processes”, IBM Journal of
Research and Development 1, 19-31 (1957). Recent references to this
fundamental paper are often given implicitly by quoting the revised
version published by Redfield in Adv. Magn. Reson. 1, 1-32 (1965).
The Prize Winner:
Alfred G. Redfield, Professor Emeritus of Physics,
Biochemistry, and Rosenstiel Basic Medical Sciences Research Center,
Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA
The Technology:
The awarded paper casts the semi-quantitative predictions of BPP
(Bloembergen, Purcell, and Pound, Phys. Rev. 73, 679 (1948)) in the form
that became that of modern spin dynamics. Assuming only that the
"thermal bath" executes a stationary random motion and that the spin
system is weakly coupled to the "bath", Redfield derives a kinetic
equation of motion for the complete spin density operator, taking into
account all spin and spin-spin interactions "exactly", without resort to
transition probability arguments. The paper demonstrates a general
scheme, applicable to any NMR situation: solids, liquids or gasses, many
spins coupled in a molecule, classical or quantum mechanical
description of the thermal bath, or persistent irradiation during the
experiment. The paper also provides the first example of the usefulness
of the "Liouville space" or "superoperator" scheme for the discussion of
NMR problems involving relaxation in a non-trivial way. After more than
50 years, the early work of Redfield is still a basic reference in the
field of relaxation.
Laudatio 2008
Awarded Contribution:
A. Pines, M. G. Gibby, and J. S. Waugh, “Proton-Enhanced
Nuclear Induction Spectroscopy. A Method for High Resolution NMR of
Dilute Spins in Solids”, J. Chem. Phys. 56, 1776-1777 (1972). The
technique announced in this short note is explained in detail in A.
Pines, M. G. Gibby, and J. S. Waugh, “Proton-Enhanced NMR of
Dilute Spins in Solids”, J. Chem. Phys. 59, 569-590 (1973). Alex
Pines played the leading role in the published work.
The Prize Winner:
Alexander Pines, Glenn T. Seaborg Professor of Chemistry, UC
Berkeley, and Senior Scientist, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,
Berkeley USA
The Technology:
The proposal of a new method for sensitive, high-resolution observation
of rare spins (e.g. 13C in natural abundance) in solids, in the presence
of abundant spins (e.g. protons). Relaxation is first used to polarize
the abundant spins, part of this polarization is then transferred to the
rare spins by cross-polarization "in the rotating frame", and the free
induction response of the rare spins is finally observed under CW
irradiation of the abundant spins. This simple method, often called just
"cross polarization", helped launch the modern era of solid-state NMR
in chemistry, materials, and biology, and inspired a wealth of useful
variations, many of which are still among the popular tools of practical
solid state NMR.
Laudatio 2009
Awarded Contribution:
The talk given by Albert Overhauser at the American Physical Society
meeting on May 1, 1953, of which an abstract appeared as Albert W.
Overhauser, Polarization of Nuclei in Metals, Phys. Rev. 91, 476
(1953), and full detail as Albert W. Overhauser, Polarization of Nuclei
in Metals, Phys. Rev. 92, 411-415 (1953).
Prize Winner:
Albert W. Overhauser, Stuart Distinguished Professor of Physics, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA
The Technology:
This contribution is the seed of two important techniques in modern NMR:
the Nuclear Overhauser Effect (NOE) and Dynamic Nuclear Polarization
(DNP).
NOE describes the mutual influence
of the polarizations of two spin species by spin-lattice relaxation.
Originally, the spins were those of the nuclei of a metal and those of
its conduction electrons. Soon after Overhauser's prediction, the effect
was demonstrated by C. P. Slichter on metallic lithium, and was shown
by Ionel Solomon to also exist between different nuclei in ordinary
liquids. The NOE has played a key role in liquid state NMR over several
decades, notably in establishing the overall structure of biological
macromolecules in solution
DNP describes the often impressive
enhancement of the nuclear polarization by strong irradiation of an
electron resonance in the sample. Particularly within recent years, DNP
technology has evolved considerably to a powerful sensitivity
enhancement method in a growing variety of NMR applications.
Laudatio 2010
Awarded Contribution:
M. Karplus, “Contact Electron-Spin Coupling of Nuclear Magnetic Moments“, J. Chem. Phys. 30, 11-15 (1959).
Prize Winner:
Martin Karplus, Professor Emeritus, Department of Chemistry
and Chemical Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts; and
Laboratoire de Chimie Biophysique, ISIS, Université Louis Pasteur,
Strasbourg, France
The Technology:
The paper introduces a theoretical derivation of the dependence of
three-bond J coupling constants on the dihedral angle φ and includes
preliminary comparisons with experimental values. The presented
equations for J(φ) have been refined over the years and have come to be
known as the Karplus equations. They have widely proven themselves as
valid for almost all combinations of magnetic nuclei separated by three
bonds and therefore are, next to the distance measurement by the Nuclear
Overhauser enhancement, the most valuable parameter for structure
elucidation, from small molecules to biological macromolecules. The
importance of 3J couplings as a structural parameter has triggered the
development of a large number of NMR pulse sequences specifically
designed to measure them in various circumstances.
Laudatio 2011
Awarded Contribution:
G. A. Morris, and R. Freeman: “Enhancement of nuclear magnetic resonance
signals by polarization transfer”, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 101, 760-762
(1979).
Prize Winner:
Gareth Alun Morris, Professor of Physical Chemistry, School of Chemistry, The University of Manchester, UK
The Technology:
INEPT is an ingenious pulse sequence, originally devised for signal
enhancement in liquid state NMR of insensitive nuclei such as carbon-13
and nitrogen-15, by broadband polarization transfer from proton spins.
Since its inception it has evolved, as a means of bi-directional
polarization transfer between coupled spins, into a major component of
modern multidimensional NMR techniques, with applications in liquids,
liquid crystals and solids. The impact of INEPT, transcending its
remarkably simple theoretical and experimental foundation, has made it
an indispensable component of the state-of-the-art NMR toolkit.
Laudatio 2012
Awarded Contribution:
R. Freeman and W.A. Anderson: “Use of Weak Perturbing Radio-Frequency
Fields in Nuclear Magnetic Double Resonance”, J. Chem. Phys. 37,
2053-2074 (1962).
Prize Winners:
Raymond Freeman, John Humphrey Plummer Professor of Magnetic
Resonance (Emeritus), Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge,
UK and Weston A. Anderson, Senior Principal Scientist and Varian Fellow
Emeritus
The Technology:
Both authors played essential roles in this contribution: Freeman as
experimentalist and Anderson as theorist. This paper offers a first
easily applicable approach to the unraveling of complex NMR spectra, and
hence of molecular structure. A Hamiltonian-based theory is developed
to explain high resolution spectra observed by the CW technique in the
presence of a second weak radiofrequency irradiation of a single line,
and is illustrated with practical examples. This work suggested many
important developments like decoupling and selective excitation. It
unlocked the long awaited perspective of using NMR for detailed studies
of proteins. Seen as a piece-wise 2D spectroscopy, it served as seed and
inspiration for the invention of pulsed 2D techniques.
Laudatio 2013
Awarded contribution:
L. Frydman, T. Scherf and A. Lupulescu: “The acquisition of
multidimensional NMR spectra within a single scan”, Proc. Natl. Acad.
Sci. USA 99, 15858-15862 (2002).
Prize Winner:
Lucio Frydman, Professor and Kimmel Fellow, Weizmann Institute, Chemical Physics Department, Israel
The Technology:
The paper, based on an original idea conceived by Lucio Frydman, the
inspiration behind the contribution of the three authors, introduces a
novel and unique technique for recording multidimensional NMR spectra in
a single scan, and describes the theoretical basis and experimental
realization of this ultrafast NMR methodology. The methodology is
proving to be invaluable in experiments that capitalize on spin
hyperpolarization, and is providing important insights into fast
processes, including chemical reactions, biochemical pathways, and
protein folding, that are inaccessible on the time scale of conventional
multidimensional NMR methods. Frydman’s technique has laid the
foundation not only for advances in NMR, but also for a robust
complement to echo planar imaging (EPI), the currently prevailing single
scan methodology for ultrafast MRI, and it has demonstrated the
possibility of producing, in high-field preclinical and clinical
settings, previously inaccessible diffusion-weighted and functional
images.