Researchers hoping to debunk Edel Wasserman’s doubted claims of the first interlinked rings end up supporting them
Over six decades after Edel Wasserman from Bell Telephone Laboratories claimed to have made the first mechanically interlocked hydrocarbon rings – without direct evidence – UK chemists have supported his findings.1 For six years David Leigh’s team at the University of Manchester sought to show that Wasserman’s 1960 letter to the Journal of the American Chemical Society was wrong. 2 In it, the US chemist claimed the first interlocked pair of rings, which he called a catenane. But after Leigh’s group painstakingly reproduced Wasserman’s work, ‘it must have been formed in his reaction’, he concludes.