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In an earlier phone interview with Science, Ertl was quick to offer credit to fellow researchers. His field, he says, was propelled by the parallel development of many surface characterization techniques. And, he adds, many scientists were adept at applying them--including Gabor Somorjai of the University of California, Berkeley, with whom he shared the 1998 Wolf Prize in Chemistry for their work in surface science. "I was a little bit disappointed he didn't share [the Nobel Prize] with me," Ertl says. Last week, several chemistry bloggers went further, arguing that Somorjai deserved recognition for his vital role in laying the foundations of surface science. For his part, Somorjai says simply that he does not understand how award decisions are made. But he notes that in the 1980s, he began steering away from ultrahigh-vacuum surface science to study reactions at solid-liquid interfaces, among other things. By contrast, Somorjai says, "Ertl stayed in there all through his life." ´ó¼Ò·ç·¶£¡£¡ |
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