Inductees...
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Aylsworth, Jonas
Bachner, Edward F.
Bacon, Clare E.
Baekeland, Leo
Baer, Eric
Bailey, James
Beall, Glen
Beetle, Carl
Belcher, Sameul L.
Bishop, Richard
Black, Otis
Blount, Clint
Boeschenstein, H
Borro, Edward
Boyer, Raymond
Bradbury, Williamry
Bradt, Rexford H.
Breskin, Charles
Brown, Gordon
Burroughs, Charles
Carothers, Wallace
Chapman, Frank
Cleworth, C. W.
Condit, Charles
Conley, Fred
Cruse, William
Deanin, Rudolph
DeBell, John
Delmonte, John
Doak, Kenneth
Dow, Willard
Doyle, Bernard
Dreyfus, Camille
Dubois, J. Harry
Eastman, George
Ehlers, Russell
Ellis, Carleton
Erikson, Erik
Estabrook, Jr., F. R.
Flory, Paul
Forger, Robert
Foster, Joseph
Fox, Daniel W.
Gatto, Charles
Gigliotti, M. F. X.
Goggin, William
Goldsworthy, W.B.
Gore, Wilbert
Grebe, John
Griffith, Henry E.
Griffith, Palmer
Gross, Sid
Grote, Sr., Walter
Haine, Walter
Hanford, William
Harding, Ralph
Heckman, Jerome
Hemming, Emile
Hendrie, George
Hobson, Edwin L.
Hoffer, Robert
Hohl, John
Holz, Harold A.
Huidekoper, P.
Humphrey, G. P.
Huntsman, Jon
Hyatt, John Wesley
Hyde, J.F.
Jennings, Garland
Karol, Frederick J.
Kavanaugh, Lionel
Keville, John
Kleiderer, C. W.
Kline, Gordon M.
Kretzschmar, J. R.
Kruder, George A.
Kwolek, S. L.
Land, Edwin H.
Lankton, Gordon
Lester, William M.
Lubin, George
Maccaferri, Mario
Maddock, Bruce H.
Mark, Herman F.
Marra, Frank S.
Marshall, Abraham
Martinelli, Guy A.
Marvel, Carl Shipp
McGrath, James E.
Morrison, Robert S.
Muehlstein, Herman
Nalle, Jr., George S.
Nissel, Frank R.
Ott, Emile
Palmer, Spencer E.
Peters, Don. L.
Pitcher, Arnold E.
Plueddemann, E.
Plunkett, Roy J.
Porter, Roger S.
Quarnstrom, Ivar
Rahm, Louis Frank
Reib, John C.
Reinhart, Frank W.
Richardson, Henry
Robertson, Harold
Rosato, Dominick V.
Rowan, Sr., Edward
Rubens, L.C. "Bud"
Rubin, Irvin I.
Schwab, Fred E.
Scribner, George K.
Seabury, R. W.
Semon, Waldo L.
Seymour, R. B.
Shaw, Frank H.
Shaw, Louis E.
Sherwood, Miller G.
Slater, John G.
Spaak, Albert
Stein, Richard S.
Stott, Lewis L.
Stoughton, T. S.
Swedlow, David A.
Thomas, Islyn
Tupper, Earl S.
Von Holdt, John
Whitlock, Carl
Willert, William H.
Wyeth, N. C.
Zimmerman, A. S.
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Paul J. Flory - Hall of Fame Entry
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Author: Plastics Academy Staff
Added: 03/29/2004
Type: Summary
Viewed: 545 time(s)
[ Not Rated Yet ] |
Paul J. Flory - Hall of Fame Entry
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Paul J. Flory
Birthdate: N/A
Deceased: N/A
Induction: 1979 Industry Areas: Material |
Winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1974. Contributed outstanding research on the composition and properties of substances composed of giant molecules -- plastics, rubbers, and fibers. His research in polymeric materials has been essential to the growth of the plastics industry.
Mr. Flory's long career spanned both the academic and the industrial worlds. He enjoyed a professional lifetime of honors and awards culminating in the coveted Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1974. From 1934 to 1938, he was engaged in basic research on synthetic fibers, rubber, and other polymeric substances at the DuPont Experimental Station. There, he worked in a group with Wallace H. Carothers on the origins of nylon.
Then, for two years, he was attached to the University of Cincinnati. From 1940 until 1943, he worked with Standard Oil Development Company, where he began his research on the properties of polymers and synthetic rubber.
In 1948, he joined Cornell University as a professor of chemistry. There he taught and conducted research with postdoctoral students.
In 1956, he became the executive director of research at the prestigious Mellon Institute. Since 1961, he has been professor of chemistry at Stanford University.
Even after officially "retiring," he continued his work on polymers, dividing his time equally between teaching physics and chemistry at Stanford and conducting basic research at IBM Research Laboratory at San Jose.
In addition to the Nobel Prize, he was awarded many other honors, including Ohio State University's Sullivan Medal (1954); the American Chemistry Society's Baekeland Award (1947); the Peter Debye Award in physical chemistry (1968); the Gibbs Medal (1973); the Priestley Medal (1974); the Frankly Institute Cresson Medal (1971); and the National Medal of Science (1974).
His many publications are considered to "tower" above others and include numerous scientific journal articles and two books: Principles of Polymer Chemistry and Statistical Mechanics of Chain Molecules. |
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