The Guardian (USA)

Sir John Meurig Thomas obituary

- Philip Ball

John Meurig Thomas, who has died aged 87, exemplifie­d a generation of British chemists who linked a vanished era of industrial prowess and innovation to the cutting edge of atomicscal­e nanotechno­logies. His field of expertise, solid-state catalysis, underpinne­d the growth of the fine-chemicals and petrochemi­cals industries, but now may hold the key to sustainabl­e green technologi­es for energy and chemical processing.

As well as making world-leading contributi­ons in that area, Thomas was celebrated for his passion for communicat­ing science to a wide audience. As director of the Royal Institutio­n in London, he co-presented the 1987 Christmas lectures, establishe­d in 1825 by Thomas’s idol Michael Faraday, and his knighthood in 1991 was “for services to chemistry and the popularisa­tion of science”. He was not only a scientist of internatio­nal renown but also a writer of great flair and eloquence.

From 1978 to 1986 he was professor and head of the department of physical chemistry at Cambridge University, before being appointed director of the Royal Institutio­n in 1986. The RI then still housed its own research lab, the Davy-Faraday research laboratory, which focused on Thomas’s field of inorganic chemistry and where he became Fullerian professor of chemistry.

Thomas studied processes of catalysis – the speeding up of chemical reactions – taking place on the surface of inorganic crystallin­e solids. He worked in particular on a class of materials called zeolites – aluminosil­icates in which the crystal structure contains channels (micropores) and cavities comparable to the size of molecules. Because these channels will only admit molecules that are small enough, they are commonly known as molecular sieves. This selectivit­y, combined with their ability to catalyse reactions that break apart or rearrange hydrocarbo­n molecules of the sort found in crude oil, makes zeolites invaluable in the petrochemi­cals industry.

At Cambridge and the RI, Thomas helped to develop new techniques, both experiment­al and computatio­nal, for investigat­ing the structures and properties of zeolites and other microporou­s materials. He had a keen eye for the possibilit­ies of new methods, pioneering a technique called magic-angle spinning that overcame the limitation­s of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) for studying the structures of solids.

At the RI, Thomas worked alongside Richard Catlow, now at University College London, and he was succeeded as RI director by Peter Day. All were chemists who built on a long British tradition in inorganic chemistry, harking back to the crystallog­raphic work of William Bragg (director of the Davy-Faraday lab from 1923 to 1942) and his son Lawrence in the 1920s and 30s, and the postwar work on inorganic catalysis by the Nobel laureate Geoffrey Wilkinson.

Thomas’s fundamenta­l studies in the structure and behaviour of solid catalysts led him towards a deep interest in methods for probing chemical reactions in unpreceden­ted detail. He was among the first to appreciate that X-rays, first used by the Braggs to study crystal structures, might be used in a new kind of microscopy that produced images showing individual molecules with atom-scale resolution. So-called synchrotro­n sources and free-electron lasers, which produce extremely intense X-ray beams, are now realising that vision.

Thomas also anticipate­d the use of laser and electron beams to create “movies” of chemical reactions as they unfold in a fraction of a billionth of a second – a technique developed in Nobel-winning work by his friend the Egyptian chemist Ahmed Zewail, of the California Institute of Technology. In such ways Thomas showed himself, even in the late stages of his career, alert to innovation­s on the horizon.

He was keenly aware that at the RI he was taking on the mantle of both Faraday and his mentor Humphry Davy. Thomas wrote extensivel­y about both men, notably in his 1991 book Michael Faraday and the Royal Institutio­n: The Genius of Man and Place. His 1986 lecture The Poetry of Science, part of the RI’s Friday Evening Discourses, captures this spirit, closely attuned to the romantic inclinatio­ns of Davy. In his Christmas lecture he quoted Ralph Waldo Emerson: “Atom from atom yawns as far as moon from earth, as star from star” – “a tremendous insight”, he added, “into the way nature is built up”.

Proud of his Welsh heritage, Thomas was born near Llanelli, Carmarthen­shire, and brought up in a mining family in the Gwendraeth valley, the son of David and Edyth. Following Gwendraeth grammar school, he studied chemistry at the University of Swansea and, after a brief stint at the UK Atomic Energy Authority (the first of his 1,200 or so published articles, in 1959, was The Chemistry of a Nuclear Reactor), took positions at the University of Wales in Bangor in 1958 and then Aberystwyt­h, before his appointmen­t at Cambridge in 1978. He was made a fellow of the Royal Society in 1977.

After leaving the RI in 1991, Thomas spent three years as deputy pro-chancellor of the University of Wales before becoming master of Peterhouse, Cambridge. He retired in 2002, after the death of his first wife, Margaret (nee Edwards), whom he had married in 1959.

Among his many awards, the 2015 Ahmed Zewail prize in molecular sciences must have given him particular pride. Thomas’s 75th-birthday symposium in Cambridge was attended both by Zewail and by the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, herself a former chemist, whose husband, Joachim Sauer, studied the interpreta­tion of NMR applied to zeolites.

Thomas combined great charm – his rich, lilting Welsh tones were hard to gainsay – with driving ambition. Conscious perhaps of his own humble start, he never forgot how hard Faraday had to work to earn a place in science. He made no secret of his own hopes of winning a Nobel, and his name would surely have been discussed in Stockholm. Perhaps this revealed how Thomas, however forward-looking about the possibilit­ies of science, neverthele­ss could not abandon a notion of the heroic lone scientist that harked back to Davy and Faraday.

Thomas was a strong supporter of the Labour party and during his directorsh­ip the Royal Institutio­n hosted the launch of Labour’s science policy under Neil Kinnock.

He is survived by his second wife, the Egyptian chemist Jehane Ragai, whom he married in 2010, and his two daughters, Lisa and Naomi, from his first marriage.

• John Meurig Thomas, chemist, born 15 December 1932; died 13 November 2020

any playoff shootout with their quarterbac­k in such blistering form and the temerity to remain unfazed in the presence of greatness.

Key player: Nelson Agholor is beginning to shine in his new surroundin­gs and leads the Raiders with six touchdown catches. Agholor also has some experience when it comes to an underdog Super Bowl success: he was a pivotal piece in Philadelph­ia’s 2017 triumph.

Super Bowl odds: 40-1

Miami Dolphins

At 6-4, the Dolphins have already eclipsed last year’s 5-11 record. Even better, they are 3-1 since Tua Tagovailoa took over at quarterbac­k, with impressive wins over the Los Angeles Rams and Chargers. Miami’s road to the Super Bowl lies with the defense, however, and the reinforcem­ents Brian Flores brought to Florida in the offseason. Shutdown corner Byron Jones rolling up alongside Xavien Howard beefed up an already intimidati­ng secondary while the front seven was upgraded with Emmanuel Ogbah, Shaq Lawson and Kyle van Noy’s arrivals. Miami rolled the dice and have reaped the reward, transformi­ng the unit ranked dead last by Football Outsiders in 2019 to 15th this campaign. The Dolphins now concede 20 points per game, the fourth-best total in the league, compared to 31 last season, which placed them rock bottom. Where Flores has flourished has been using deception to throw offenses into turmoil. He has regularly sent eight men across the line then immediatel­y dropped two back before sacking the quarterbac­k as the true blitzer is left unblocked. It worked wonders in driving a system passer like Jared Goff crazy when the Dolphins upset the Rams earlier this month. Forcing opponents’ passes to fly everywhere but the arms of receivers could earn a first postseason victory for Miami since 2000.

Key player: Xavien Howard leads the league with six intercepti­ons. A true shutdown corner.

Super Bowl odds: 40-1

Arizona Cardinals

The Cardinals should make the postseason despite sitting third in the NFC West at 6-4. Their final six games feature winnable matchups with the Patriots, Giants, Eagles and 49ers, which allows for a degree of confidence in at least securing a wild card. The Cards have watched each of their division rivals make the Super Bowl in the last decade but now, with the conference looking comparativ­ely open, Kyler Murray can finally lead them back to the promised land. Arizona lead the league in yards per game (414), while Murray’s 29 total touchdowns firmly put him in the running for MVP. Then there is DeAndre Hopkins. The game-winning Hail Mary catch against Buffalo was the latest instalment in his ‘how to punish defenders’ series. The stars may just be aligning for Kliff Kingsbury and the Cardinals to meet the Steelers in the Super Bowl and take glorious revenge on Ben Roethlisbe­rger for their heartbreak­ing defeat in 2009 at the same Raymond James Stadium that will host this season’s showpiece.

Key player: Budda Baker is the cutting edge on defense. He earned the NFC defensive player award for October

– and the only game Arizona lost that month was the one he missed.

Super Bowl odds: 28-1

Dallas Cowboys

The Cowboys are true outsiders … sort of. Someone has to win the NFC East, almost definitely with a losing record. Dallas are going to do it, even after their loss to Washington on Thursday. You can feel it. Andy Dalton transforms into 12-4 2015 Bengals mode and we can finally see the full force of CeeDee Lamb, Amari Cooper and Michael Gallup. Then anything can happen in January. Maybe. An offensive line would help too.

Key player: Ezekiel Elliot, a force of nature at running back who can, more realistica­lly, take some pressure off Dalton and lead Dallas to a 5-11 or 6-10 division win.

Super Bowl odds: 200-1

 ?? Photograph: Conrad Erb ?? John Meurig Thomas’s work may hold the key to green technologi­es for energy and chemical processing.
Photograph: Conrad Erb John Meurig Thomas’s work may hold the key to green technologi­es for energy and chemical processing.

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