Robert Huber was along with some of the best chemists in the world. He started in Munich Germany and researched mostly crystallography and organic compounds. After graduating in 1971 he became the director at Max Planck Institute for Biochemistry. Here he developed methods for the crystallography of proteins. While he continued to accomplish chemists tast, he won the Noble Prize for Chemistry in 1988. He won this by being noticed for being the first to crystallize an intramembrane protein important in photosynthesis in purple bacteria, and applying X-ray crystallography to elucidate the proteins structure. He now is married with four children and is teaching at the Cardiff University.
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