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         Wilkinson Sir Geoffrey:     more detail
  1. Basic Inorganic Chemistry by F.Albert Cotton, Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson, 1976-02
  2. Advanced Inorganic Chemistry: A Comprehensive Text by F.Albert Cotton, Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson, 1980-05-07
  3. Comprehensive Coordination Chemistry: The Synthesis, Reactions, Properties, and Applications of Coordination Compounds, vol. 4, Middle Transition Elements.: An article from: Canadian Chemical News by Mary Frances Richardson, 1990-02-01
  4. Comprehensive Coordination Chemistry: The Synthesis, Reactions, Properties, and Applications of Coordination Compounds, vol 5, Late Transition Elements.: An article from: Canadian Chemical News by Mary Frances Richardson, 1990-02-01

61. Prix Nobel De Chimie
Translate this page 1973 EO Fischer (D) et G. wilkinson (GB). sir Derek Harold Richard Barton (1918-1998)et Odd Ernst Otto Fischer (1918- ) et geoffrey wilkinson (1921-1996) ont
http://histoirechimie.free.fr/Nobel.htm
de Chimie Prix Nobel
J.H. Van't Hoff (NL) E. Fischer (D) S. Arrhenius (S) W. Ramsay (GB) A. Von Baeyer (D) H. Moissan (F) E. Buchner (D) E. Rutherford (GB) W. Ostwald (D) O. Wallach (D) M.Curie (F) V. Grignard (F) et P. Sabatier (F) A.Werner (CH) Th. Richards (USA) R. Willstatter (D) F. Haber (D) W. Nernst (D) F. Soddy (GB) F. W. Aston (GB) F. Pregl (A) R. Zsigmondy (D) T Svedberg (S) H. Wieland (D) A. Windaus (D) A. Harden (GB) et H. Von Euler-Chelpin (D) H. Fischer (D) C.Bosch (D) et F. Bergius (D) J. Langmuir (USA) H.C. Urey (USA) J. F. Joliot-Curie (F) et I. Joliot-Curie (F) P Debye (NL) W.N. Haworth (GB) et P. Karrer (CH) A.F.J. Butenandt (D) et L. Ruzicka (CH) G. de Hevesy (S) O. Hahn (D) A.J. Virtanen (SF) J.B. Sumner (USA), J.H. Northrop (USA) et W.M. Stanley (USA) R. Robinson (GB) A.W.K. Tiselius (S) W.E Giauque (USA) O. Diels (D) et K. Alder (D) G.T.Seaborg (USA) et E.M. Mac Millan (USA) A.J.P. Martin (GB) et L.M. Synge (GB) H. Staudinger (D) L. Pauling (USA) V. du Vigneaud (USA) A. Todd (GB)

62. Newcastle University Library - What Primary Material Is Available On My Research
The five scientists are sir Nevill Mott (nobel Prize, Physics, 1977); Lord Porter(nobel Prize, Chemistry, 1967); sir geoffrey wilkinson (nobel Prize, Chemistry
http://www.ncl.ac.uk/library/lim/resin/resprin1.html
NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
What primary material is available on my research topic?
The Research Support Libraries Programme (RSLP)
The Research Support Libraries Programme has enabled British libraries to catalogue many collections of material so that they can be located by researchers over the internet. Full details of all the projects listed below are available at http://www.rslp.ac.uk/projects/default.htm
  • Nineteenth Century Pamphlets
    These important pamphlet collections are being catalogued to benefit researchers in the humanities and social sciences. They include the pamphlet collections in the University Library that can be found on the Library catalogue. All the records are being added to COPAC Online Guide to the Papers of Charles Booth
    The archives of the British Library of Political and Economic Science contain the original records from Booth's survey into life and labour in London, dating from 1886-1903. The archives of the University of London Library contain Booth family papers from 1799 to 1967.The Charles Booth Online Archive provides free desk-top access to guides, digitised images and maps from the Booth archive collections. Pamphlet and Polemic: pamphlets as a guide to the controversies of the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries
    The Universities of Aberdeen, St Andrews and the University of Wales Lampeter all hold rich collections of important and hitherto little known 17th-19th century pamphlets, forming a rich resource for research. The purpose of the project is to make these collections better known to the wider research community by adding records to the catalogues of these University Libraries.

63. MSU Chemistry - Genealogy Work Area - W
as Briscoe YorkU shows wilkinson, sir geoffrey Henry Vincent Display geoffreywilkinson (1921-1996) (PhD 1946, Imperial was awarded the 1915 nobel Prize in
http://www.cem.msu.edu/geneal/work-area-W.html
Chemical Genealogy Work Area - W
This page is a work area in which information about every person in the MSU Chemical Genealogy charts is gathered and evaluated. The references to several chemical genealogy sources, including those available on the WWW in addition to reference books, are listed on the previous page. The last line for each individual, in bold font and labeled "display:", shows the text to be displayed on the MSU Chemistry genealogy web pages for the individual. This page will always be a work in progress. Please let us know of any errors, or additional opinions or evidence, by e-mailing us at: cemweb@cem.msu.edu
Display: Peter John Wagner, Jr (1938-) (PhD 1963, Columbia) (MSU 1965-) [preceptor: Cheves Walling] display: James Walker (1863-1935) (PhD 1889, Liepzig) [preceptor: Friedrich Wilhelm Ostwald] display: Otto Wallach (1847-1931) (PhD 1869, Gottingen) [preceptor: Hans Julius Anton Edward Hubner] Display: Cheves Walling (1916-) (PhD 1939, Chicago) [preceptor: Morris Selig Kharasch] Display: William Ben Walters (-) (PhD 1964, Illinois) [preceptor: John Philip Hummel]

64. Nobel Prize For Chemistry
nobel Prize for Chemistry. and. sir geoffrey wilkinson (Great Britain, *14.7.1921 +1996) Great Britain, Imperial College, London, for their pioneering work
http://lem.ch.unito.it/chemistry/nobel_chemistry.html
Nobel Prize for Chemistry
This directory is compiled and maintained by Carlo Nervi and Mauro Ravera
Feedback cheerfully accepted.
Last updated ( or ): 13 October 1999
Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff (The Netherlands, 30.8.1852 - 1.3.1911)
Germany, Berlin University,
"in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by the discovery of the laws of chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure in solutions"
Hermann Emil Fischer (Germany, 9.10.1852 - 15.7.1919)
Germany, Berlin University,
"in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by his work on sugar and purine syntheses"
Svante August Arrhenius (Sweden, 19.2.1859 - 2.10.1927)
Sweden, Stockholm University,
"in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered to the advancement of chemistry by his electrolytic theory of dissociation" Sir William Ramsay (Great Britain, 2.10.1852 - 23.7.1916) Great Britain, London University, "in recognition of his services in the discovery of the inert gaseous elements in air, and his determination of their place in the periodic system" Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf von Baeyer (Germany, 31.10.1835 - 20.8.1917)

65. Ëàóðåàòû Íîáåëåâñêèõ ïðåìèé ïî õèìèè
Werner, Alfred, 1913. Wieland, Heinrich Otto, 1927. wilkinson, sir geoffrey,1973. Zsigmondy, Richard Adolf, 1925. nobel Prize in Chemistry Winners 19961901.
http://orel.rsl.ru/archiv/nob_ch.htm
CHEMISTRY
Alphabetical listing of Nobel prize laureates in Chemistry
Name Year Awarded Alder, Kurt Altman, Sidney Anfinsen, Christian B. Arrhenius, Svante August Aston, Francis William Baeyer, Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf Von Barton, Sir Derek H. R. Berg, Paul Bergius, Friedrich Bosch, Carl Boyer, Paul D. Brown, Herbert C. Buchner, Eduard Butenandt, Adolf Friedrich Johann Calvin, Melvin Cech, Thomas R. Corey, Elias James Cornforth, Sir John Warcup Cram, Donald J. Crutzen, Paul Curie, Marie Curl, Robert F., Jr. Debye, Petrus Josephus Wilhelmus De Hevesy, George Deisenhofer, Johann Diels, Otto Paul Hermann Eigen, Manfred Ernst, Richard R. Euler-chelpin, Hans Karl August Simon Von Fischer, Ernst Otto Fischer, Hans Fischer, Hermann Emil Flory, Paul J. Fukui, Kenichi Giauque, William Francis Gilbert, Walter Grignard, Victor Haber, Fritz Hahn, Otto Harden, Sir Arthur Hassel, Odd Hauptman, Herbert A. Haworth, Sir Walter Norman Herschbach, Dudley R. Herzberg, Gerhard

66. Nobel Prize For Chemistry
nobel Prize for Chemistry. research on chemical reaction kinetics 1957 sir AlexanderTodd 1973 Ernst Otto Fischer (W. Germany) and geoffrey wilkinson (UK), for
http://www.factmonster.com/ipa/A0105786.html

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Nobel Prize for Chemistry
For years not listed, no award was made.
Jacobus H. van't Hoff (Netherlands), for laws of chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure in solutions Emil Fischer (Germany), for experiments in sugar and purin groups of substances Svante A. Arrhenius (Sweden), for his electrolytic theory of dissociation Sir William Ramsay (U.K.), for discovery and determination of place of inert gaseous elements in air Adolf von Baeyer (Germany), for work on organic dyes and hydroaromatic combinations Henri Moissan (France), for isolation of fluorine, and introduction of electric furnace

67. Prix Nobel
Translate this page Les prix nobel de chimie. 1957, sir Alexander R. Todd, Grande-Bretagne, 2.7.1907- 1997. geoffrey wilkinson, 1/2 du prix, Grande-Bretagne, 14.7.1921 - 1996.
http://www.cegep-st-laurent.qc.ca/depar/chimie/nobel.htm
Les prix Nobel de chimie
Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff Pays-Bas, 30.8.1852 - 1.3.1911 Découverte des lois de la cinétique chimique et de la pression osmotique des solutions Emil H. Fischer Allemagne, 9.10.1852 - 15.7.1919 Études dans le domaine des sucres et des purines Svante A. Arrhenius Suède, 19.2.1859 - 2.10.1927 Théorie de la dissociation des électrolytes Sir William Ramsay Grande-Bretagne, 2.10.1852 - 23.7.1916 Découverte des gaz rares dans l'air Adolf von Baeyer Allemagne, 31.10.1835 - 20.8.1917 Colorants organiques et composés aromatiques Henri Moissan France, 28.9.1852 - 20.2.1907 A isolé et étudié le fluor et le silicium Eduard Buchner Allemagne, 20.5.1860 - 13.8.1917 Études biochimiques, découverte de la fermentation sans cellules Sir Ernest Rutherford Grande-Bretagne (né en Nouvelle-Zélande) 30.8.1871 - 19.10.1937 Chimie des éléments radioactifs et désintégration Wilhelm Ostwald Allemagne (né en Russie) 2.9.1853 - 4.4.1932 La catalyse, les équilibres chimiques et cinétique chimique Otto Wallach Allemagne, 27.3.1847 - 26.2.1931 Composés alicycliques Marie Curie France (née en Pologne) 7.11.1867 - 4.7.1934

68. R.M. Barrer (IZA)
he had sir Derek Barton and the late sir geoffrey wilkinson as Professors of Organicand Inorganic Chemistry respectively, both nobel Laureates; surely he
http://www.iza-online.org/RMBarrer.html
Richard Maling Barrer, FRS
Richard Maling Barrer , the Founding Father of Zeolite Chemistry and a prominent figure in Membrane Science, died peacefully at his home in Chislehurst, Kent on Thursday, 12th September 1996 after a six year battle with cancer. The International Zeolite community has lost its most important member. Outside the laboratory Barrer showed great prowess at athletics and tennis. He won the Oxford-Cambridge cross-country race in 1934 and the British Universities Athletic Union cross-country championship for 1935. He was awarded a full blue for Athletics for these achievements and was a serious contender for selection for the 10,000 metres race in the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin. His tennis was still good enough, as late as 1990, to withstand all challenges in partnership with Bob Van Norstrand, who was six years younger than Barrer, at the triennial British Zeolite Association meetings in Farringtons School, Chislehurst. He gained his Ph.D. degree in Cambridge in 1935; D.Sc.(New Zealand) in 1937: Sc.D.(Cambridge) in 1948. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1956 and an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand in 1965. From 1937-39 he was a Research Fellow, Clare College, Cambridge; 1939-46 Head of Chemistry at Bradford Technical College; 1946-48 Reader in Chemistry, Bedford College, University of London; 1948-54 Chair of Chemistry and Head of Department, University of Aberdeen; 1954-76 Professor of Physical Chemistry and Head of the Chemistry Department, Imperial College, London. During his headship of the Department at Imperial he had Sir Derek Barton and the late Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson as Professors of Organic and Inorganic Chemistry respectively, both Nobel Laureates; surely he chaired one of the most powerful Chemistry departments in the world.

69. Nobel For Chemistry: All Laureates
Paul J. Flory 1973 Ernst Otto Fischer, geoffrey wilkinson 1972 Christian B WilhelmAdolf von Baeyer 1904 sir William Ramsay The nobel Prize A History of Genius
http://www.popular-science.net/nobel/chem-list.html
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70. The Alfred B. Nobel Prize Winners: Chemistry
nobel Prize Winners for Chemistry. 1973, Ernst Otto Fischer geoffrey wilkinson, GermanyGreat Britain. 1975, sir John Cornforth Vladimir Prelog, Australia Great
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Nobel Prize Winners for Chemistry
Physics Physiology or Medicine Literature Peace ... Economics Jacobus H. van't Hoff Netherlands Hermann Emil Fischer Germany Svante A. Arrhenius Sweden Sir William Ramsay Great Britain Adolf von Baeyer Germany Henri Moissan France Eduard Buchner Germany Ernest Rutherford Great Britain Wilhelm Ostwald Germany Otto Wallach Germany Marie Curie Poland-France Victor Grignard
Paul Sabatier France
France Alfred Werner Switzerland Theodore W. Richards United States Germany Fritz Haber Germany Walther H. Nernst

71. Chemistry 1973
The nobel Prize in Chemistry 1973. Ernst Otto Fischer, geoffrey wilkinson. 1/2of the prize, 1/2 of the prize. Federal Republic of Germany, United Kingdom.
http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1973/
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1973
"for their pioneering work, performed independently, on the chemistry of the organometallic, so called sandwich compounds" Ernst Otto Fischer Geoffrey Wilkinson 1/2 of the prize 1/2 of the prize Federal Republic of Germany United Kingdom Technical University
Munich, Federal Republic of Germany Imperial College
London, United Kingdom b. 1918 b. 1921
d. 1996 The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1973
Press Release

Presentation Speech
Ernst Otto Fischer ...
Banquet Speech
The 1973 Prize in:
Physics

Chemistry

Physiology or Medicine

Literature
... Economic Sciences Find a Laureate: Last modified June 16, 2000 The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

72. RSLP - SIr Geoffrey Wilkinson
geoffrey wilkinson was born in Springside, a village close to Laureates, the firstbeing the physicist, sir John Cockcroft and the second, wilkinson.
http://www.bath.ac.uk/ncuacs/rslp-gw.htm
National Cataloguing Unit for the Archives of Contemporary Scientists cataloguing project supported by the
Research Support Libraries Programme The papers of
Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson (1921-1996), chemist
BIOGRAPHY Early years Student studies and wartime research MIT and Harvard Imperial College London ... Link to online catalogue Back to RSLP Project
BIOGRAPHY Early years
Geoffrey Wilkinson was born in Springside, a village close to Todmorden in west Yorkshire on 14 July 1921. His introduction to chemistry came at a quite early age through his mother's elder brother who had married into a family that owned a small chemical company making Epsom and Glauber's salt for the pharmaceutical industry. He was educated in the local council primary school and after winning a County Scholarship in 1932, went to Todmorden Secondary School which is distinguished by having amongst its former pupils two Nobel Laureates, the first being the physicist, Sir John Cockcroft and the second, Wilkinson. Student studies and wartime research
MIT and Harvard
Back to RSLP Project
Back to the top Imperial College London

Comprehensive Organometallic Chemistry was published under his editorship and in 1995, the much larger 14-volume supplement set, was a compelling tribute to the pace of advance in the subject that he had led for so many years.

73. Untitled
He , geoffrey's mother's elder brother, was a well known wilkinson also releaseda 14volume supplement set he formally retired from the sir Edward Frankland
http://inst.augie.edu/~gjhonsbr/wilkinson.html
The Life and Work of Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson Geoffrey R. Wilkinson was one of the chief influences in the field of 20 th -century chemistry. To be more specific, he was one of the chief influences in the field of inorganic chemistry. His accomplishments made an impact on how inorganic chemistry was viewed and taught all over the world. Not only is his work of particular interest, but the work of those who influenced him as well. Chemical genealogy is one of the most important aspects of the improvement of chemistry and is important in the ongoing research being done today. Geoffrey Wilkinson had many influencers in his life and without them, he would not have had such a successful life. He learned from his teachers and in turn influenced others and continued the growth of chemistry. Wilkinson's accomplishments are vast and are deeply important to the field of chemistry. RMS Andes for his first crossing of the Atlantic. The catastrophic consequences of the possible loss of that particular ship at sea from enemy action did not bear thinking about" (1). Wilkinson and all of the other influential people on the ship could have been lost at sea. When Wilkinson arrived, at the end of January, he was sent to Montreal Canada where he worked as a scientific officer in the joint UK/US/Canadian atomic energy project. He was later relocated to the Chalk River area until 1946. From there, he joined Professor Glenn Seaborg's research group in at the University of California at Berkeley, doing research on nuclear taxonomy. Wilkinson was "the first non-American cleared by the US Atomic Energy Commission for work in the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory" (1). While he worked at the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, he made many new neutron deficient isotopes.

74. Give The Details
reader (perhaps you!) will know all about your work. A story told byNobel Laureate, sir geoffrey wilkinson, illustrates this point
http://www.rod.beavon.clara.net/detail.htm
The following is quoted in Kanare, p69. It is a salutary lesson in recording detail. Never mind the details of the chemistry - note that the small point about the solvent transfer, omitted in the report originally, makes all the difference to the experiment and its reproducibility. Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson was at Imperial College, University of London, and co-author of Cotton and Wilkinson, a standard University inorganic text. How much detail should be recorded in your notes? Could another scientist who is competent in your field pick up your notebook and repeat your work solely from the written description without additional explanation? If the answer is yes, then you are doing a good job. Too many details are better than for you to assume that a future reader (perhaps you!) will know all about your work. A story told by Nobel Laureate, Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson, illustrates this point: Mr. A. J. Shortland made the first synthesis of hexamethyltungsten, one of the biggest breakthroughs in transition metal organometallic chemistry, by a method involving interaction of methyllithium with WC1 in ether. This was described in

75. Wilkinson Related Pages
Gina wilkinson is in the cast of the movie The Ticket Back; sir Geoffreywilkinson of London won the nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1973;
http://www.wilkinsons.com/WRelated.html
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Wilkinson-Related Web Pages
The links on this page are not personal home pages of Wilkinsons. However, they each have some link with the Wilkinson name, and may be of some interest. This should not be seen as an endorsement of any of the businesses listed here. The order is random, and the contents of the list change as I find more interesting pages. If you would like to submit a site for inclusion on this list, please send mail to Scott Wilkinson . Sites followed by the icon were not reachable the last time I checked. Any site that is unreachable three times will be removed unless I am told otherwise. If your site has disappeared from the list, please check the Link Archive for a reason and send a message to add it back. Newsworthy Wilkinsons Wilkinson-related Businesses Things Named for Wilkinsons Books Written by Wilkinsons ... Pages Administered by Wilkinsons Newsworthy Wilkinsons

76. Winners Of The Nobel Prize In Chemistry
The nobel Prize Internet Archive. 1998. ERNST OTTO FISCHER and sir geoffrey WILKINSONfor their pioneering work, performed independently, on the chemistry of the
http://www.fundp.ac.be/~lambertc/PaYsAger/chemistry.html
Nobel Prize in Chemistry Winners 1998-1901 brought to you by The Nobel Prize Internet Archive Proposal: Benoit Champagne for his elucidation of chaotic trajectories of drunken dancers The prize was divided, one half being awarded jointly to: P AUL D. B OYER and J OHN E. W ALKER for their elucidation of the enzymatic mechanism underlying the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and with one half to: J ENS C. S KOU for the first discovery of an ion-transporting enzyme, Na , K -ATPase. The prize was awarded jointly to: R OBERT F. C URL, ... ROTO , and R ICHARD E. S MALLEY for their discovery of fullerenes. The prize was awarded jointly to: P AUL C RUTZEN ... OLINA , and F S HERWOOD R ... OWLAND for their work in atmospheric chemistry, particularly concerning the formation and decomposition of ozone. G EORGE A O ... LAH for his contribution to carbocation chemistry. The prize was awarded for contributions to the developments of methods within DNA-based chemistry equally between: K ARY B M ... ULLIS for his invention of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method. and M ICHAEL S MITH for his fundamental contributions to the establishment of oligonucleiotide-based, site-directed mutagenesis and its development for protein studies.

77. Nobel Prize In Chemistry Winners 1999
The nobel Prize Internet Archive. 1999. ERNST OTTO FISCHER and sir geoffrey WILKINSONfor their pioneering work, performed independently, on the chemistry of the
http://www.lib.szu.edu.cn/szulibhtm/AD_xkzt/BD_hx/Winner-Nobel.htm

78. Nobel Prize In Chemistry - Wikipedia
http//www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/index.html. 1955 Vincent du Vigneaud 1956Sir Cyril Norman Stein 1973 Ernst Otto Fischer, geoffrey wilkinson 1974 Paul J
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Prize/Chemistry
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Nobel Prize in Chemistry
(Redirected from Nobel Prize/Chemistry Winners of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry , listed by year of award in ascending order.
Jacobus Henricus van't Hoff Hermann Emil Fischer Svante August Arrhenius Sir William Ramsay ... Richard Adolf Zsigmondy The (Theodor) Svedberg Heinrich Otto Wieland Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus Arthur Harden Hans Karl August Simon von Euler-Chelpin ... Robert Curl , Sir Harold Kroto Richard Smalley Paul D. Boyer John E. Walker ... Koichi Tanaka
Source: http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/index.html
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79. WILKINSON GEOFFREY (1921-1996)
Translate this page geoffrey wilkinson fait des études de chimie à l wilkinson a immédiatement l’intuitionque, comme le fer, d Robert Burns Woodward (Prix nobel de chimie 1965
http://histoirechimie.free.fr/Lien/WILKINSON.htm
WILKINSON GEOFFREY (1921-1996) Nature catalyseur de Wilkinson

80. ARB_CV
Transition Metal Aluminohydrides. Research under the supervision of ProfessorSir geoffrey wilkinson FRS 3 CORPORATE SUPPORT 1987 Present 1) Akzo nobel.
http://python.rice.edu/~arb/ARB_CV.html
CURRICULUM VITAE ANDREW R. BARRON
Office Address:
Department of Chemistry Rice University 6100 Main Street Houston, TX 77005 Phone: (713) 348-5610 FAX: (713) 348-5619 e-mail: arb@rice.edu
PRESENT POSITION: Charles W. Duncan, Jr. - Welch Chair of Chemistry and Professor of Materials Science, Department of Chemistry and Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science, Rice University. RESEARCH INTEREST: Applications of inorganic chemistry to the materials science of aluminum, gallium and indium, including: a) Activation of small molecules by Group 13 and Group 12 Lewis acids. b) Alumina-nanoparticles as a simple route to ceramic and composite materials. c) Aluminum-oxygen macromolecules and clusters (alumoxanes) as catalyst materials. d) Coordination structure/reactivity relationship in the organometallic chemistry of Group 13 metals. PREVIOUS POSITIONS:
1) Associate Professor of Chemistry, Harvard University, July 1991-July 1995 2) Assistant Professor, Harvard University, July 1987 - July 1991.
EDUCATION:
1) 1986-1987: Post-doctoral Research Associate at the University of Texas, Austin.

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