Education
Born in Hackensack, Minnesota, Parshall received a Bachelor of Science degree with highest distinction from the University of Minnesota in 1951. He received his Doctor of Philosophy in Organic Chemistry from the University of Illinois in 1954 under the direction of Reynold C. Fuson.
Career
He was a senior scientist at East. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company for many years. In 1954, he joined Central Research Department at du Pont Experimental Station, where he rose to Director of Chemical Sciences. He took two industrial sabbaticals, one at Imperial College London in 1960-1961 and another at University of Oxford in 1986.
He was a visiting Ipatieff Lecturer at Northwestern University of the fall of 1994.
Parshall was a senior manager at du Pont during an era of rapid development and commercialization of organometallic chemistry and homogeneous catalysis. He directed the work of 50 to 100 DuPont scientists, including that of Fred Tebbe and Richard Schrock.
The activation of carbon-hydrogen bonds was a recurring theme of his own research. He conducted research on the use of molten salts in catalysis and initiated work on organolanthanide chemistry.
He conducted early studies related to nitrogen fixation.
He was most closely associated with the DuPont processes for making critical polymer intermediates used in producing nylon and polyester and spandex. Parshall coauthored a textbook on “Homogeneous Catalysis” with Steven Ittel. Parshall also directed the development of alternatives to the chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) used in refrigerators and air conditioners.
When Parshall retired from DuPont in 1992, he joined the effort to destroy chemical weapon stockpiles in the United States and across the world.
The Chemical Weapons Convention called for the destruction of these chemicals, which generally fell into three types.
Membership
National Academy of Sciences]
As a member of the National Research Council’s “Stockpile Committee,” he has played a role in advising the United States. Army in its ongoing effort to safely destroy chemical weapons.