8 October 2025
Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2025 Honors Advances in Molecular Construction

You are accessing a machine-readable page. In order to be human-readable, please install an RSS reader.
All articles published by MDPI are made immediately available worldwide under an open access license. No special permission is required to reuse all or part of the article published by MDPI, including figures and tables. For articles published under an open access Creative Common CC BY license, any part of the article may be reused without permission provided that the original article is clearly cited. For more information, please refer to https://www.mdpi.com/openaccess.
Feature papers represent the most advanced research with significant potential for high impact in the field. A Feature Paper should be a substantial original Article that involves several techniques or approaches, provides an outlook for future research directions and describes possible research applications.
Feature papers are submitted upon individual invitation or recommendation by the scientific editors and must receive positive feedback from the reviewers.
Editor’s Choice articles are based on recommendations by the scientific editors of MDPI journals from around the world. Editors select a small number of articles recently published in the journal that they believe will be particularly interesting to readers, or important in the respective research area. The aim is to provide a snapshot of some of the most exciting work published in the various research areas of the journal.
Original Submission Date Received: .
Susumu Kitagawa, Richard Robson and Omar M. Yaghi are awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2025. The laureates have created molecular constructions with large spaces through which gases and other chemicals can flow. These constructions, known as metal–organic frameworks (MOFs), can be used to harvest water from desert air, capture carbon dioxide, store toxic gases or catalyse chemical reactions.
Richard Robson is a professor at the University of Melbourne in Australia, Susumu Kitagawa teaches at Kyoto University in Japan, and Omar M. Yaghi is a professor at the University of California, Berkeley.
The experiments the trio conducted in the 1980s laid the foundation for the development of thousands of additional metal–organic structures. Their discoveries have transformed materials chemistry, enabling scientists to design porous materials with atomic-level precision.
Our heartfelt congratulations go to Professors Kitagawa, Robson, and Yaghi on this remarkable achievement!
For more information, read the Nobel Committee’s press release.
At MDPI, we are proud to have been entrusted with publishing the work of several of this year’s Nobel laureates.
Professor Omar Yaghi has published research in the MDPI journal Molecules, together with two colleagues from the University of California, Berkeley:
Article published with MDPI
Authors: Christian S. Diercks, Markus J. Kalmutzki and Omar M. Yaghi
Covalent Organic Frameworks—Organic Chemistry Beyond the Molecule
Molecules 2017, 22(9), 1575