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The Chemical Educator
ISSN: 1430-4171 (electronic version)
Table of
Contents
Abstract Volume 24
(2019) pp 138-139
Leo A. Paquette, Master of Total Synthesis (1934–2019), An Obituary-Tribute
George B. Kauffman*
Department of Chemistry, California State University, Fresno, Fresno, CA 93740-8034, georgek@mail.fresnostate.edu
Published: 4 December
2019
Abstract. Leo Armand Paquette was born in Worcester,
Massachusetts on July 15, 1934. He earned his B.S. degree from Holy Cross
College in 1956 and his Ph.D. in organic chemistry from the Massachusetts of
Technology in Cambridge in 1959. He served as a Research Associate at the
Upjohn Company in Kalamazoo, Michigan from 1959 to 1963. He then joined the
faculty of Ohio State University in Columbus, where he became Full Professor in
1969 and Distinguished University Professor in 1987. He was a member of the
National Academy of Sciences since 1984. He served on advisory committees for
the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National Science Foundation
(NSF). He was a member of the editorial boards of many periodicals. His
research contributions included heterocyclic chemistry, natural product
chemistry, and the properties of architecturally interesting compounds. He was
the author of more than 1000 articles, 38 book chapters, and 17 books. He
mentored about 150 graduate students to their Ph.D. degrees. Paquette is best
known for achieving the first total synthesis of a Platonic solid in
1962, dodecahedrane (C20H20). It does not occur in nature, but it’s systhisis was a great chemical
achievement. Paquette died on January 21, 2019
in Columbus, Ohio at the age of 84 after a long battle with Parkinson’s
disease. His survived by his wife of 61 years, Estelle; and five children, 13
grandchildren, and 5 great-grandchildren.
Key Words: Chemistry and History; Organic Chemistry; Biography; Total Synthesis; Platonic Solid; Dodecahedrane Synthesis; Hydrocarbon Chemistry; Upjohn Company; Ohio State University; Arthur P. Sloan Fellowship; National Academy of Sciences; Organic Chemistry Journals; Arthur C. Cope Scholar of the American Chemical Society; Senior Humboldt Fellowship; Guggenheim Fellowship; Synthetic Methodology; Unusual Molecules; Methodology
(*) Corresponding author.
(E-mail: georgek@mail.fresnostate.edu)
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