Mario J. Molina AKA Mario José Molina Born: 19-Mar-1943 Birthplace: Mexico City, Mexico
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: Hispanic Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Chemist Party Affiliation: Democratic Nationality: United States Executive summary: Ozone depletion American chemist Mario J. Molina studied the environmental damage caused by chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), a class of chemicals widely used in industrial and consumer applications including aerosol spray cans, pressurized containers, and refrigerators. In collaboration with F. Sherwood Rowland, Molina showed that CFCs accumulate in the ozone layer and, when exposed to the ultraviolet radiation that abounds there, CFCs rapidly break down to their base chemicals � chlorine, fluorine, and carbon. Freed from their bond to fluorine and carbon, the chlorine atoms then wreak havoc among ozone molecules, effectively destroying up to 100,000 ozone molecules for each chlorine atom. The result of this, Molina and Rowland postulated, is the breakdown of the ozone layer's ability to block the sun's harmful ultraviolet rays. As a result of their research, the use of CFCs has been largely eliminated by law, and Molina and Rowland shared the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1995 with Paul J. Crutzen. Father: Roberto Molina Pasquel (lawyer-diplomat) Mother: Leonor Henriquez de Molina Wife: Luisa Tan Molina (chemist, m. 1973, div., one son) Son: Felipe (physician, b. 1977) Wife: Guadalupe Alvarez (m. Feb-2006)
University: BS Chemical Engineering, National Autonomous University of Mexico (1965) University: MS Chemical Engineering, University of Freiburg (1967) Teacher: Chemical Engineering, National Autonomous University of Mexico (1967-68) University: PhD Physical Chemistry, University of California at Berkeley (1972) Scholar: Chemistry, University of California at Berkeley (1972-73) Professor: Chemistry, University of California at Irvine (1973-82) Scholar: Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology (1982-89) Professor: Chemistry & Atmospheric Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1989-97) Professor: Inst. Prof. of Earth, Atmosphere, and Planetary Sciences, MIT (1997-2004) Professor: Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California at San Diego (2004-) Professor: Center for Atmospheric Sciences, Scripps Research Institute (2004-)
Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement 1983 (with F. Sherwood Rowland)
ACS Gustavus J. Esselen Award 1987
AAAS Newcomb Cleveland Prize 1988
NASA Medal for Exceptional Scientific Advancement 1989
Nobel Prize for Chemistry 1995 (with Paul J. Crutzen and F. Sherwood Rowland) American Association for the Advancement of Science American Chemical Society El Colegio Nacional
Federation of American Scientists Board of Sponsors Institute of Medicine MacArthur Foundation Board of Directors National Academy of Sciences NASA Advisory committees National Institutes of Health National Science Foundation Pew Charitable Trusts Scholars grant, 1990 Pontifical Academy of Sciences Mexican Ancestry
Naturalized US Citizen Asteroid Namesake 9680 Molina Democratic National Committee Gore 2000 Hillary Rodham Clinton for US Senate Committee John Kerry for President
Author of books:
The Science of Global Change (1992, with Luisa T. Molina) Air Quality in the Mexico Megacity (2002, with Luisa T. Molina)
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