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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Martin Gruebele (born January 10, 1964, in Stuttgart, Germany)[1] is a German-born American physical chemist[2] and biophysicist who is currently emeritus James R. Eiszner Chair in Chemistry (pending Trustee approval), Professor of Physics, Professor of Biophysics and Computational Biology at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.[3]
Martin Gruebele | |
---|---|
Born | |
Citizenship | American |
Alma mater | University of California, Berkeley, California Institute of Technology |
Known for | Protein folding, scanning tunneling microscopy, ultrafast laser spectroscopy |
Awards | Hans Neurath Award of the Protein Society, Nakanishi Prize, Sackler Prize, Friedrich Bessel Research Prize, Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation Fellowship |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Chemistry, Physics, Biophysics, Computational biology |
Institutions | University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign |
Academic advisors | Richard Saykally, Ahmed Zewail |
Website | http://www.scs.illinois.edu/mgweb/ |
He was born in Stuttgart, Germany, son of Helmut Grübele and E. A. Victoria Grübele with two younger siblings Andrea and Philip. He attended the Lycée Français in Vienna, Austria, the Colegio ECOS in Marbella, Spain, and Drew School in San Francisco, US as Valedictorian. He completed his B.S in chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley in 1984, with the University Certificate of Distinction and Department Citation for Highest Honors. He was advised by Ken Sauer (biophysics), Wilhelm Maier (organic synthesis), and Richard J. Saykally (laser spectroscopy). He did his graduate work at the University of California, Berkeley in the laboratory of Richard J. Saykally, where he was a University Fellow (1984–1986), IBM Predoctoral Fellow, (1986–1987), and a Dow Chemical Graduate Fellow (1987–1988). Subsequently he held a postdoctoral position with Ahmed Zewail at California Institute of Technology, after which he joined the faculty of the University of Illinois in 1992.[citation needed]
Gruebele, now professor emeritus, was Head of chemistry (2017–2020) and James R. Eiszner Endowed Chair in Chemistry (2008–2024), professor of physics, professor of biophysics and quantitative biology, professor in the Center for Advanced Study, and professor in the Carle-Illinois College of Medicine. He also was a faculty member of the Beckman Institute at the University of Illinois, and was an adjunct professor of physics at Michigan State University to support biological physics faculty mentoring.[citation needed]
His research covers a wide range of areas in chemical physics and biological physics, including the kinetics of biological systems, quantum dynamics of energy flow within molecules, and optically assisted scanning tunneling microscopy. A common theme of his research is the implementation of state-of-the-art laser and microscopy techniques to interrogate and manipulate complex systems, coupled with quantum or classical simulations. He has published over 300 articles, books and patents on topics ranging from quantum computing, to RNA and protein folding in the test tube and inside cells, to fish swimming behavioral studies,[2] and ultra-distance cycling.
Gruebele collaborated with Hanoi University of Science to port the University of Illinois Department of Chemistry undergraduate curriculum for Chemistry to Vietnam.[23] He has been on the list of "Teachers Ranked Excellent by their Students" at Illinois multiple times (most recently 2024),[24] and received the School of Chemical Sciences Teaching Excellence Award.[25] He is a contributor to LibreTexts, which makes open-access textbooks available to students.
Gruebele is married to Nancy Makri,[26] who is also a professor of chemistry and physics at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. They have two children, Alexander and Valerie. He has a strong interest in cycling, running, swimming and triathlon[27] and has competed in many long-distance events, such as the 2013 Boston Marathon,[28] the 2016 solo Race Across America,[29] the 2019 Badwater Ultramarathon,[30][31] the 1406 mile DECA 2022 World Championship ultratriathlon,[32] the 10 day non-stop run at "6 Days in the Dome" in 2024,[33] 15-IronmanTM-Distances-in-15-Days at "What is the Limit" Garda Lake in 2024,[34] and the Ironman World Championship.[27] He has written three how-to books on multi-day ultra-distance cycling, ultratriathlon, and ultrarunning.[35]
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