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Kenneth Denbigh

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Other names
  
Prof K G Denbigh

Other name
  
Prof K G Denbigh

Died
  
2004

Born
  
1911
Luton

Occupation
  
British chemist and scientific philosopher

Prof Kenneth George Denbigh FRS (1911–2004) was a British chemical engineer and scientific philosopher. He wrote much on the issue of time in relation to thermodynamics. He was an associate of the Russian chemist Georgi Gladyshev.

Contents

Edinburgh University named the Kenneth Denbigh Building at King's Buildings in his honour. They also offer a Kenneth Denbigh Scholarship to science students.

Life

He was born in Luton on 30 May 1911 the son of George Denbigh, manager of Brothertons Chemical Works in Wakefield. He attended Leeds University graduating BSc in 1932. He then undertook his doctorate under Robert Whytlaw-Gray gaining a PhD in 1934. He then went to work for Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI) until 1938 when obtained a post of Lecturer in Chemistry at Southampton University.

In the Second World War he was taken back into industry, as head of the laboratories for the Royal Ordnance Factory at Bridgwater. This led him into his first hands-on experience with practical issues concerning thermodynamics.

In 1948 he received a post lecturing at the Chemical Engineering Department at Cambridge University and this provided a stepping-stone to be Professor of Chemical Technology at Edinburgh University in 1955. This in turn took him to Imperial College, London in 1960. In 1966 his final move was to be principal of Queen Elizabeth College in London.

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of London in 1965.

He died in London on 23 January 2004.

Publications

  • The Thermodynamics of the Steady State (1951)
  • Thermodynamics and the Sense of Time (1953)
  • The Principles of Chemical Equilibrium (1955)
  • Chemical Reactor Theory (1965)
  • An Inventive Universe (1975)
  • Three Concepts of Time (1981)
  • Entropy in Relation to Incomplete Knowledge (1985)
  • Family

    He married Kathleen Enoch in 1935. They had two sons.

    His son Jonathan Denbigh was also a scientist.

    References

    Kenneth Denbigh Wikipedia


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