George C. Pimentel
George Claude Pimentel was a preeminent chemist and researcher, the inventor of the chemical laser, who was also dedicated to science education and public service. He developed the technique of matrix isolation in low-temperature chemistry. He also developed time-resolved infrared spectroscopy to study radicals and other transient species. In the late 1960s, Pimentel led the University of California team that designed the infrared spectrometer for the Mars Mariner 6 and 7 missions that analyzed the surface and atmosphere of Mars.
He was a passionate and popular teacher of first-year chemistry for his entire career.
In science education, he was best known for the, a national effort to improve high-school chemistry teaching. He participated in the production of films and other supplementary materials and in the training of teachers nationwide. Later, in 1985, he organized and edited the National Academy of Sciences' "Pimentel Report," formally known as, which highlighted the most important challenges in chemistry at that time. It was a resource for general public including lawmakers. A revised version,, was used worldwide for high school and college students.
An alumnus of University of California, Los Angeles and University of California, Berkeley, Pimentel began teaching at Berkeley in 1949, where he remained until his death in 1989 from intestinal cancer, with a three year appointment as Deputy Director at the National Science Foundation under the Carter administration in Washington, D.C..
Honors and awards
The ACS Award in Chemical Education was renamed the George C. Pimentel Award in Chemical Education in his honor in 1989.- Earle K. Plyler Prize for Molecular Spectroscopy
- Wolf Prize in Chemistry
- Peter Debye Award
- Elected to the American Philosophical Society
- National Medal of Science
- Franklin Medal
- Welch Award
- American Institute of Chemists Gold Medal
- Priestley Medal
- George C. Pimentel Award in Chemical Education