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Susumu Kitagawa, Richard Robson, and Omar Yaghi are to be awarded the 2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry “for the development of metal-organic frameworks.” Here's our brief story on the prize, which includes links to our past coverage of the designer porous materials.

#NobelPrize #chemistry #physics
Creators of metal–organic frameworks honored with chemistry Nobel
The versatile porous materials have found use across the physical sciences.
pubs.aip.org
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en.afp.com
"It is going to be disastrous if this continues"

Nobel Prize physics laureate John Clarke says Trump cuts will 'cripple' US scientific research

u.afp.com/SmAy
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tomhowarth.bsky.social
Congratulations to Prof Omar Yaghi and his colleagues on winning the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their pioneering work on world-changing materials. 🧪

I caught up with Prof Yaghi a few weeks ago to chat all about his work. You can listen to our conversation below:
pod.link/1296673906/e...
pod.link
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laurahowes.bsky.social
Have we written about MOFs before? Um, quite a bit:

cen.acs.org/topics/mater...
cenmag.bsky.social
The 2025 #NobelPrize in Chemistry has been awarded to Susumu Kitagawa, Richard Robson and Omar M. Yaghi “for the development of metal–organic frameworks.” Stay tuned for the full story to come! cen.acs.org/people/nobel...

#ChemNobel #Chem #Chemistry #chemsky 🧪
The 2025 chemistry Nobel goes to MOFs
Susumu Kitagawa, Richard Robson and Omar M. Yaghi win the prize for developing metal–organic frameworks
cen.acs.org
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scigorski.bsky.social
From a 2019 interview with Kitagawa -- "it was common sense that organic materials could not make a stable porous structure. People thought we were doing “useless” research because they did not realize the potential of the seemingly trivial space inside the pores." pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
Interview with Professor Susumu Kitagawa
CONTENT TYPES
pubs.acs.org
physicstoday.bsky.social
Metal–organic frameworks also have applications in carbon capture. In February 2022, we featured one that can capture carbon dioxide in flue-gas exhaust.

pubs.aip.org/physicstoday...
Solid sorbent captures carbon
A new zinc metal–organic framework physically snatches carbon dioxide from wet gas, even in humid conditions.
pubs.aip.org
physicstoday.bsky.social
Susumu Kitagawa, Richard Robson, and Omar Yaghi are to be awarded the 2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry “for the development of metal-organic frameworks.”

#NobelPrize
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shanilv.ca
I love the quote from #Yale’s Dr. Schoelkopf that puts today’s #physics #NobelPrize in context.

Mirroring the evolution of the #internet, quantum 3.0 will be the era of working #quantum #computing. With it, an explosion of knowledge that transforms how we discover, compute, & perhaps even think. 🔭🧪
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williamthomas.bsky.social
And Martinis? His dad was a refugee from Yugoslavia. repository.aip.org/node/129661
My dad was born in Croatia. As it happened, his father left for the United States shortly
before the war. And the family left behind were kind of by themselves over the war and 
thirteen to seventeen. So, he had a very difficult childhood, and especially the teenage
years, and actually never talked about it much. I think he did quite well for having such a
difficult time growing up. After the war, his family was trying to get to the United States.
Yugoslavia was beginning to close up at the time because of the communist government.
In the end, escaped from Yugoslavia and had security people chasing him to make an
example of him. In the old country his family fished. So, when he went to Washington
state that is what he did with his father and brother. During the off season he came
down to San Pedro in California, where he had relatives, and met my mom.
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ohdearz.bsky.social
Valuable info about the Physics Nobel Prize today from Prof. Joseph Barranco at SFSU on Martinis and Devoret being a grad student and postdoc in Clarke's lab at UC Berkeley & Clark and Devoret being immigrants. "California *public* education made this happen. Immigration made this happen." ⚛️
Joseph Barranco posted on social media: Go Bears! Nobel Prize in Physics goes to 3 physicists studying mesoscopic quantum phenomena... Work was done in the 1980s in UC Berkeley Professor John Clarke's lab with his graduate student John Martinis and postdoctoral fellow Michel Devoret... all 3 share the Nobel Prize.  Must also point out that both Clarke and Devoret are immigrants from the UK and France, respectively.  All 3 are pioneers in the race to build the most powerful quantum supercomputers.  California *public* education made this happen. Immigration made this happen.
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castelvecchi.bsky.social
John Martinis’ wife didn’t wake him in the middle of the night (California time) to tell him he had won a Nobel. “I got up a little bit before 6. Then I opened my computer and saw John and Michel’s and my pictures."
Story by @lizziegibney.bsky.social and me

www.nature.com/articles/d41...
Groundbreaking quantum-tunnelling experiments win physics Nobel
John Clarke, Michel Devoret and John Martinis discovered quantum physics on a macroscopic scale, paving the way for quantum computing.
www.nature.com
physicstoday.bsky.social
Devoret on Clarke: "John remains...what you would call a role model in science. Being one of his advisees was wonderful and a great chance for my career."

See the full interview here:

#NobelPrize #physics #iteachphysics
repository.aip.org
physicstoday.bsky.social
Michel Devoret also recalled John Clarke's "strict and intense training" in his 2021 @aip.bsky.social oral history interview:

"Basically, John Clarke was coming to see us every day in the lab and was asking, 'What is new today?'" He was both jovial and respectful, besides being demanding."
physicstoday.bsky.social
For more beautiful insights into the collaborative nature of this year's Nobel Prize–winning research, check out Martinis's @aip.bsky.social oral history interview here:

repository.aip.org/node/129661
repository.aip.org
physicstoday.bsky.social
John Martinis on the advising style of fellow Nobel laureate John Clarke:

"He came into the lab and talked with you every day. At the time it was sometimes annoying, but looking back this was probably the single most important thing he did to train me as an experimentalist."

#NobelPrize
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williamthomas.bsky.social
Congratulations to this year's winners of the Nobel Prize in Physics. Be sure to check out our oral histories with:

John Martinis: repository.aip.org/node/129661

Michel Devoret: repository.aip.org/node/129778
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aip-publishing.bsky.social
AIP congratulates Clarke, Devoret, & Martinis—winners of the 2025 #NobelPrize in Physics. Their 1985 work at UC Berkeley showing quantum effects in circuits was foundational for quantum technology.

Read about their influential discovery📃
👉 https://aippub.org/46PxgCZ

#QuantumPhysics
AIP Congratulates 2025 Nobel Prize Winners in Physics - AIP Publishing LLC
Nobel committee honors work that bridges quantum mechanics and the tangible world.   WASHINGTON, Oct. 7, 2025 – The 2025 Nobel Prize in physics was awarded to John […]
aippub.org