Awards & Winners

Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus

Date of Birth 25-December-1876
Place of Birth Berlin
(Germany)
Nationality Germany
Profession Chemist
Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus was a German chemist who won a Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1928 for his work on sterols and their relation to vitamins. He was the doctoral advisor of Adolf Butenandt who also won a Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1939. Adolf Windaus was born in Berlin. His interest in chemistry was raised by lectures of Emil Fischer. He started studying medicine and chemistry in Berlin and later in Freiburg. He got his PhD in early 1900 and focused on cholesterol and other sterols at the University of Freiburg. In 1913 he became professor for chemistry at the University of Innsbruck and in 1915 he changed to the University of Göttingen where he stayed until his retirement in 1944. He was involved in the discovery of the transformation of cholesterol through several steps to vitamin D3. He gave his patents to Merck and Bayer and they brought out the medical Vigantol in 1927.

Awards by Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus

Check all the awards nominated and won by Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus.

1928


Nobel Prize in Chemistry
(for the services rendered through his research into the constitution of the sterols and their connection with the vitamins.)