Nationality United States Name Arthur Noyes Known for Electrolytes | Institutions MITCaltech Role Chemist | |
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Born 13 September 1866Newburyport, Massachusetts, USA ( 1866-09-13 ) Alma mater MITUniversity of Leipzig Notable awards Willard Gibbs Award (1915), Davy Medal (1927) | ||
Doctoral students Roscoe G. Dickinson Notable students Roscoe G. Dickinson |
Full event video: An Evening With Stephen Lippard
Arthur Amos Noyes (September 13, 1866 – June 3, 1936) was a U.S. chemist, inventor and educator. He received a PhD. in 1890 at Leipzig under the guidance of Wilhelm Ostwald.
Contents
- Full event video An Evening With Stephen Lippard
- 42nd Annual Killian Award LectureStephen Lippard
- NoyesWhitney equation
- References
He served as the acting president of MIT between 1907 and 1909 and as Professor of Chemistry at the California Institute of Technology from 1919 to 1936. "Although [the Noyes] laboratory at MIT was like an institute in its intramural funding (from Carnegie Institute of Washington and Noyes's patent royalties), Noyes recruited many of his disciples as undergraduates and took a deep interest in undergraduate engineering education, both at MIT and later at Caltech. Roscoe Gilkey Dickinson was one of his famous students.
Noyes was a major influence both on the educational philosophy of the core curriculum of Caltech as well as in the negotiations leading to the creation of the National Research Council along with George Ellery Hale and Robert Millikan. He also served on the board of trustees for Science Service, now known as Society for Science & the Public, between 1921 and 1927.
42nd Annual Killian Award Lecture—Stephen Lippard
Noyes–Whitney equation
Along with Willis Rodney Whitney, he formulated the Noyes–Whitney equation in 1897, which relates the rate of dissolution of solids to the properties of the solid and the dissolution medium. It is an important equation in pharmaceutical science. The relation is given by:
Where: