Leo Paquette Explained

Leo Paquette
Birth Date:15 July 1934
Birth Place:Worcester, Massachusetts, U.S.
Death Place:Columbus, Ohio, U.S.
Fields:Organic chemistry
Workplaces:Upjohn Company
Ohio State University
Alma Mater:College of the Holy Cross (BS)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (PhD)
Doctoral Advisor:Norman A. Nelson
Known For:Dodecahedrane synthesis
Awards:Arthur P. Sloan Fellowship
Guggenheim Fellowship
Arthur C. Cope Scholar Award (1987)
Ernest Guenther Award (1992)

Leo Armand Paquette (– January 21, 2019)[1] was an American organic chemist.

Biography

Paquette was born on July 15, 1934, in Worcester, Massachusetts. He received a Bachelor of Science (B.S.) in 1956 from the College of the Holy Cross and a Ph.D. in organic chemistry from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1959, under the supervision of Norman Allan Nelson. After serving as a research associate at the Upjohn Company from 1959 to 1963, he joined the faculty of Ohio State University (OSU).

Paquette was promoted to full professor at OSU in 1969 and was named Distinguished University Professor in 1987. He was elected a member of the National Academy of Sciences in 1984, and was the founding editor of the Electronic Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis (e-EROS).[2] Paquette is best known for achieving the first total synthesis of the Platonic solid dodecahedrane.[3]

Scientific misconduct

In 1991, the Ohio State University investigatory panel found that Paquette had plagiarized a NSF proposal, that he was also a reviewer for, and included sections in a paper he published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. The NSF's Office of Inspector General (OIG) found that Paquette knowingly "submitted falsified evidence for the purpose of disproving the misconduct in science charge" and made "false statements under oath in the OIG investigation concerning the authenticity of the evidence". The falsified evidence consisted of a computer disk that included a "'mock draft,' a copy of the paper's final draft that Paquette had marked up to look like an earlier draft" and was back-dated prior to Paquette's review of the NSF proposal and, importantly, prior to the manufacture of the disk. The US Secret Service also found that someone had attempted to erase the lot number of the disk. In 1998, the NSF entered into a binding settlement with Paquette: Paquette would voluntarily exclude himself from any federal funding for two years and the NSF would not "issue a finding of misconduct in science".[4]

Honors

Paquette's honors include Sloan Fellow, Guggenheim Fellow, ACS Award for Creative Work in Synthetic Organic Chemistry, and the Arthur C. Cope Scholar Award of the ACS.

Books

Further reading

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Leo Paquette Obituary - Columbus, OH | This Week Community Newspapers. .
  2. Book: e-EROS: Editors & Contributors . 10.1002/047084289x . 2001. 10261/236866 . 9780470842898.
  3. 10.1021/ja00354a043. Leo A. Paquette . Robert J. Ternansky . Douglas W. Balogh . Gary Kentgen . 1983. Total synthesis of dodecahedrane. Journal of the American Chemical Society. 105. 16. 5446–5450.
  4. Zurer P . NSF, Paquette Settle Misconduct Case . Chemical & Engineering News . 76 . 10 . 25–26 . March 9, 1998 . 10.1021/cen-v076n010.p025 .