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Graeme Jameson

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Name
  
Graeme Jameson


Graeme Jameson wwwnewcastleeduaudataassetsimage00071876

Laureate Professor Graeme Jameson


Graeme Jameson AO (born 1936) is an engineer, professor and Director of the Centre for Multiphase Processes at the University of Newcastle (UoN), in New South Wales, Australia. He is notable for being the inventor of the Jameson Cell mineral separation device, which he devised in the 1980s. The Jameson Cell uses bubbles to separate super fine particles during mineral processing. It is based on the froth flotation mineral separation process, first invented in 1905.

Contents

Graeme Jameson Laureate Professor Graeme Jameson Staff Profile The University

In the coal industry alone, Jameson's cell has retrieved A$36 billion worth of export coal particles. It is being used worldwide in the separation of coal, copper, lead, nickel, platinum, silver and zinc.

Graeme Jameson Laureate Professor Graeme Jameson Staff Profile The University

Education

Graeme Jameson Graeme Jameson

In 1960 Jameson received a Bachelor of Science (Chemical Engineering), from the University of New South Wales (UNSW), and in 1964 a PhD (Chemical Engineering), from the University of Cambridge, UK.

Graeme Jameson US patent challenge against NSW Scientist of the Year Graeme

Jameson has been Professor of Chemical Engineering at UoN since 1978.

Awards

Graeme Jameson Laureate Professor Graeme Jameson Staff Profile The University

Jameson received the Order of Australia Medal (AO) in 2005, and the Antoine M. Gaudin Medal in 2013. In 2013 he was also NSW Scientist of the Year. In 2015 he won a Prime Minister's Prize for Science for his cell, the 'Prime Minister’s Prize for Innovation'.


Graeme Jameson About us Multiphase Processes Centres Research and Innovation

References

Graeme Jameson Wikipedia