Sir John Anthony Pople (October 31, 1925 – March 15, 2004) was a theoretical
chemist. Born in Burnham on Sea, Somerset, England, he attended Bristol Grammar
School. He moved to the United States of America in the early 1960s, where he
lived the rest of his life, though he retained British citizenship. He received
his B. A. (in 1946) and doctorate (in 1951) degrees in mathematics, from
Cambridge University in the United Kingdom. His thesis was, however, on a topic
that would generally be considered chemistry: the bonding structures of water.
Pople considered himself more of a mathematician than a chemist, but theoretical
chemists consider him one of the most important of their number.
His first major contribution was a theory of approximate molecular orbital (MO)
calculations on pi electron systems in 1953, identical to the one developed by
Rudolph Pariser and Robert G. Parr in the same year, and now called the Pariser-Parr-Pople
method. Subsequently, he developed the methods of Complete Neglect of
Differential Overlap (CNDO) (in 1965) and Intermediate Neglect of Differential
Overlap (INDO) for approximate MO calculations on three-dimensional molecules,
and other developments in computational chemistry. He pioneered the development
of more sophisticated computational methods, so called ab initio methods, that
used basis sets of either Slater type orbitals or Gaussian orbitals to model the
wave function. While in the early days these calculations were extremely
expensive to perform, the advent of high speed microprocessors has made them
much more feasible today. He was instrumental in the development of one of the
most widely used computational chemistry packages, the "GAUSSIAN"(tm) suite of
programs. However, since 1991, Pople was not only excluded from development of
the software, he was actually banned by Gaussian from even using their software.
In 1986 he moved from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
where his earlier accomplishments were made, to Northwestern University in
Evanston, Illinois.
He received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1998. He was made a fellow of the
Royal Society in 1961. He was knighted in 2003.
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