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William Draper Harkins

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Nationality
  
U.S.

Role
  
Chemist

Alma mater
  
Stanford University

Education
  
Stanford University


Fields
  
Nuclear chemistry

Name
  
William Harkins

William Draper Harkins image2findagravecomphotos200650964411404904

Institutions
  
University of Montana University of Chicago

Died
  
March 7, 1951, Chicago, Illinois, United States

Notable awards
  
Willard Gibbs Award (1928)

Books
  
The physical chemistry of surface films

Doctoral students
  
Lyle Benjamin Borst

Notable students
  
Samuel King Allison

William Draper Harkins (December 28, 1873 – March 7, 1951) was an U.S. chemist, notably for his contributions to nuclear chemistry. Harkins researched the structure of the atomic nucleus and was the first to propose the principle of nuclear fusion, four years before Jean Baptiste Perrin published his theory in 1919-20. His findings enabled, among other things, the development of the H-bomb.

Harkins was born in Titusville, Pennsylvania.

Harkins graduated with a PhD from Stanford University in 1907, and subsequently taught chemistry at the University of Montana from 1900 to 1912. He spent the rest of his career at the University of Chicago.

Harkins correctly predicted the existence of the neutron in 1920, which was then discovered in an experiment by James Chadwick in 1932. In the beginning of the 1930s, Harkins built a cyclotron. From experiments with this, he concluded that the sun might be powered by nuclear fusion. Among other University of Chicago scientists who made use of this cyclotron was Enrico Fermi, who performed neutron diffusion experiments.

Since 1978, the magnet yoke of the cyclotron Harkins built has been on display at Fermilab.

Among his students were Lyle Benjamin Borst, Calvin Souther Fuller, Martin Kamen, Samuel Allison, and Robert James Moon, Jr. (1911–1989).

Harkins died in Chicago. He is buried at Oak Woods Cemetery.

References

William Draper Harkins Wikipedia