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Arthur Stoll

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Alma mater
  
Name
  
Arthur Stoll


Education
  
Arthur Stoll

Born
  
January 8, 1887Schinznach-Dorf, Aargau, Switzerland (
1887-01-08
)

Notable awards
  
Marcel Benoist Prize (1942)Fellow of the Royal Society

Died
  
January 13, 1971, Dornach, Switzerland

Arthur Stoll (8 January 1887 – 13 January 1971) was a Swiss biochemist.

Contents

Arthur Stoll httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsee

Education and career

Arthur Stoll SPE Mold Making amp Mold Design Division Honors Arthur Stoll

The son of a teacher and school headmaster, he studied chemistry at the ETH Zurich, with a PhD in 1911, where he studied with Richard Willstätter. In 1912, he became a research assistant at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Chemistry in Berlin, with Richard Willstätter, with whom he explored important insights on the importance of chlorophyll in carbon assimilation.

Arthur Stoll SPE Mold Making amp Mold Design Division Honors Arthur Stoll

In 1917, he was appointed professor of chemistry at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. In the same year, he was hired as head of the pharmaceutical department of the Sandoz (now Novartis) chemical factory in Basel. In this company, he was president from 1949 to 1956, Director from 1964 he held the office of President of the Board.

Together with Sandoz employees, he developed a range of methods for producing drugs. Thus, he developed the first isolation of ergot alkaloids (as ergotamine and ergobasine) and cardiac glycosides, which are used as a medicine for heart diseases and migraines. A continuous process for the production of soluble calcium salts was developed. He worked with Albert Hofmann.

Personal life

Stoll also collected modern art, including paintings by Ferdinand Hodler.

Awards

  • member of the German Academy of Natural Scientists Leopoldina
  • Foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
  • Foreign Member of the Royal Society
  • 1959 Paul Karrer Gold Medal
  • References

    Arthur Stoll Wikipedia