Graham Fleming
American chemist

Graham Fleming

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American chemist
Gender:
Male
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Birth:
3 December 1949(Barrow-in-Furness)
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Biography

Introduction

Graham R. Fleming (born 1949) is a British born chemist, currently serving as professor at the University of California, Berkeley.

Career

Fleming received a B.S. (with honors) degree in Chemistry from the University of Bristol (1971) and a Ph.D. degree in Physical Chemistry from the University College London (1974). He spent the next five years as a postdoctoral researcher at three institutions: California Institute of Technology (1974–1975); University of Melbourne (1975–1976); and the Royal Institution in the United Kingdom (1976–1979).

In 1979 Fleming received his first academic appointment, as assistant professor at University of Chicago (1979–1983). In 1983 he was appointed associate professor, and in 1985 he was made a full professor (A. H. Compton Distinguished Services Professor). He filled that position until 1997, when he accepted a dual position at the University of California, Berkeley as professor in Chemistry and as the first director of the Physical Bioscience Division of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory; in 2002 he was given the chair of Melvin Calvin Distinguished Professor of Chemistry at UCB. In April, 2009, Fleming was appointed UCB's vice chancellor for research, responsible for administering all federal, state and private research funds received by the campus and overseeing all campus museums and research units. He resigned under protestfrom this position following accusations of sexual harassment by a previously fired UCB employee. Many UCB faculty members questioned the fairness of UCB's investigation, which provided no mechanism for appeal.

Fields of study pursued by Fleming and his study groups include condensed-phase chemical and biological dynamics, photosynthesis operations, quantum dynamics, quantum information in condensed phases, photochemical reactions, electronic processes at nanoscale, and development of nonlinear optical spectroscopes.

He was the first to apply two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy to photosynthetic systems. He got particularly known for the work published in 2007 claiming evidence for quantum coherence in photosynthetic energy transfer, an explanation of the high efficiency of photosynthesis. This interpretation of the observed spectra has since been proven incorrect.

Significant publications

  • Carotenoid Cation Formation and the Regulation of Photosynthetic Light Harvesting. (co-author), Science 307, 433-436 (2005)
  • Two-dimensional Spectroscopy of Electronic Couplings in Photosynthesis. (co-author), Nature 434, 625-628 (2005)
  • Evidence for wavelike energy transfer: Quantum coherence in photosynthetic systems. (co-author), Nature 446, 782 (2007)
  • Coherence dynamics in photosynthesis: Protein protection of excitonic coherence. (co-author), Science 316, 1462 (2007)
  • Architecture of a Charge-Transfer State Regulating Light Harvesting in a Plant Antenna Protein. (co-author), Science 320, 794-796 (2008)

Awards and honors

  • made a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1991)
  • made a Fellow of the Royal Society of London (1994)
  • received an award from the Inter-American Photochemical Society (1996)
  • received an award from the Royal Society of Chemistry (1996)
  • presented the Centenary Lecture to Royal Society of Chemistry (1996)
  • presented the Max T. Rogers Distinguished Lectureship lecture at Michigan State University (1997)
  • received the Peter Debye Award in Physical Chemistry from the American Chemical Society (1998)
  • received the Harrison Howe Award in Physical Chemistry from the ACS (1999)
  • received the Earle K. Plyler Prize for Molecular Spectroscopy from the American Physical Society (2002)
  • received the Sierra Nevada Distinguished Chemist Award (2003)
  • received the Porter Medal from the European Photochemistry Association (2004)
  • made a Member of the United States National Academy of Science (2007)
  • presented the Presidential Lecture to Iowa State University (2008)
  • received the Ahmed Zewail Award in Ultrafast Science and Technology from the ACS (2008)
  • received the Joel Henry Hildebrand Award in the Theoretical & Experimental Chemistry of Liquids from the ACS (2009)