Sneha Girap (Editor)

Wilhelm Eitel

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Wilhelm Eitel


Died
  
July 20, 1979

Books
  
Silicate Structures and Disp, Structural conversions in crystalli, Glass Science, Silicate science, Industrial Glass: Glazes a

Wilhelm Hermann Julius Eitel (6 May 1891 – 20 July 1979) was born on 6 May 1891 (Frankfurt am Main) and became a prominent German-American scientist, dying in the United States in 1979.

Contents

Education

In Frankfurt am Main, Wilhelm Eitel completed his pre-academical training at the Wöhler-Gymnasium in 1909; after that he studied at the universities of Tübingen (1 semester) and Heidelberg (5 semesters), where, on 23 July 1912, he obtained his Ph.D. in "Mineralchemie" (mineralogical chemistry) from his promotor Professor Theodor Curtius.

Research and Positions

In 1920 and 1921 Wilhelm Eitel was assistant professor in mineralogy at the University of Leipzig; from 1921 to 1926 professor at the University of Königsberg, and from 1926 to 1945 full professor in mineralogy at the Technical University of Berlin From 1926 to 1945 Professor Wilhelm Eitel also held the office of director of the "Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Silicatforschung" in Berlin (now: Fraunhofer-Institut für Silicatforschung). In this function Eitel is known to have provided ample employment for women scientists.

In December 1945 Eitel became one of the 1,500 German scientists transferred by the Office of Strategic Services to the United States during Operation Paperclip. From 1945 to 1952 Wilhelm Eitel worked for the US Navy; and from 1952 to 1961 Dr. W. Eitel held the post of director of the Silicate Research Institute at the University of Toledo, Ohio.

According to the obituary in the "Toledo Blade" paper of 22 July 1979 Dr. Eitel is the author of a multitude of scientific papers and books; he had just completed volume 8 of his monograph series "Physical Chemistry of Silicates", when he died. Wilhelm Eitel received an honorary law degree from the University of Toledo; he had been guest professor at the University of Bologna (Italy) and the Technische Universität Aachen.

Professor Wilhelm Eitel was a member of many professional societies, among which the British Society of Glass Technology, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Ceramic Society and the Division of Engineering and Industrial Research of the National Research Council. A wide variety of scientific problems were being studied at the KWI, including the manufacture of "Panzerglass" (bullet-proof glass) from local German raw materials and the hydrothermal synthesis of the mineral muscovite. Notably the latter research was of such great value to the Office of Strategic Services, that attention was focused on the person of Wilhelm Eitel (see: Lasby, 1971; Macrakis, 1993). One of the first tasks for Eitel in the USA was found in the "Synthetic Mica Program" at the Electronical Laboratory of the United States Bureau of Mines in Norris, Tennessee. Synthetic mica was of strategic interest to the United States, because it would have to provide an alternative for natural muscovite for use in electronic equipment.

Nazi Involvement

Eitel had become a member of Hitler's NSDAP in May 1933, and remained a staunch supporter of the Nazi Party until his unsolicited transfer to the USA in 1945. According to Stoff (2007) LinkWilhelm Eitel was a controversial person, the more so because he was an active member of the NSDAP since 1933. In this Nazi organisation Eitel controlled the party cells inside the whole of the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft (KWI). Throughout World War 2 Wilhelm kept working as the Director of the KWI in Berlin. Eitel's contributions to the German war economy consisted mainly of research on building materials such as cement and concrete to be used in building Reichsautobahnen and the bunkers of the Organisation Todt.

References

Wilhelm Eitel Wikipedia


Similar Topics