Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Canada Award

The company he founded in 1986, Goodfellow Consultants Inc., receited the 1992 Canada Award for Business Excellence (CABE) in the environmem field for the development of a computer program for the design of specialized industrial ventilation systems. Dr. Gtxidfellow is a recognized expert in the en tiiation, air pollution control, and air quality area.s. [Pg.1549]

National Quality Institute. 2001. Canada Awards for Excellence Entry Guide. Toronto, Ontario National Quality Institute. [Pg.175]

Dr. Schramm has won several national awards for his research, including the Canadian Society for Chemical Engineering - Bayer Award in Industrial Practice and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada - Conference Board of Canada Award for Best Practices in University-Industry R D Partnership. He is a Fellow of the Chemical Institute of Canada, a past Director of the Association of the Chemical Profession of Alberta, and a member of the American Chemical Society. He has 100 scientific publications and patents in the open literature and over 220 proprietary research reports for industry. This is his fifth book, following Emulsions Fundamentals and Applications in the Petroleum Industry, The Language of Colloid and Interface Science, Foams Fundamentals and Applications in the Petroleum Industry, and Suspensions Fundamentals and Applications in the Petroleum Industry. [Pg.624]

Paul O Neill (third from left) accepts Nordions Canada Award for Business Excellence in September 1987for devising a commercial production process for high-purity iodine-123. [Pg.212]

Canadian patents on its production techniques and was able to sell the technology to locations that could not be supplied from Vancouver because of the isotopes 13.2-hour half-life. At the fourth annual Canada Award for Business Excellence ceremony in Halifex, Nova Scotia, in September 1987, Nordion received an award for the... [Pg.212]

Third Chemical Congress of North America, American Chemical Society, June, 1988, Toronto, Canada, Herman Skolnik Award Symposum, Scientific... [Pg.134]

Acknowledgment We dedicate this account to the memory of David Gin, a wonderful person and truly inspiring scientist. We thank the NSF (CAREER Award CHE-0847061) for support of our work. This project also benefited from support through graduate fellowships to D.B.C.M. from Eli Lilly, the NSERC of Canada, and Bristol-Myers Squibb, as well as an Amgen Young Investigator... [Pg.98]

We are grateful to Lisa Lindqvist for helpful comments on the manuscript. R. C. is supported by a CIHR Cancer Consortium Post-doctoral Training Grant Award. Work in the laboratory is supported by grants from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, National Cancer Institute of Canada, and NIH (CA114475). [Pg.327]

In 1943, after being awarded the D.Sc. degree, Jeanloz was appointed as Research Associate, first with Meyer and then with Tadeusz Reichstein, Nobel Laureate for his work on steroid hormones. With Reichstein he studied the chemistry of deoxy sugars, some of which are constituents of these hormones, and developed3 a new method for the assay of these sugars. In 1946-1947 he spent 1 year in Canada as Research Associate at the University of Montreal, where he collaborated with D. A. Prins from the Research Division, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH, in the preparation of... [Pg.5]

Antonio Violante is Professor of Agricultural Chemistry at the University of Naples, Italy. He received his Ph. D. in Chemistry at the University of Naples in 1969. He was awarded postdoctoral fellowships from the University of Wisconsin, USA (1967-1977) and the University of Saskatchewan, Canada (1981-1982) and was invited Visiting Professor in the Department of Soil Science, University of Saskatchewan, Canada in 1985, 1992 and 2003. [Pg.362]

His awards include the SETAC Founders Award, the Honda Prize for Eco-Technology, the Order of Ontario, and the Order of Canada. He has served on the editorial boards of several journals and is a member of SETAC, the American Chemical Society, and the International Association of Great Lakes Research. [Pg.925]

The research reported here was supported by grants from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and Canadian Institutes of Health Research to SK. CH is a recipient of the Alzheimer Society of Canada studentship award. SK is a recipient of a Tier-11 Canada Research Chair in Medicine and Psychiatry and a Senior Scholar award from the Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research. [Pg.289]

David P. Wilkinson received his BASc degree in chemical engineering from the University of British Columbia in 1978 and his PhD degree in chemistry from the University of Ottawa in 1987. In 2004, after 20 years of industrial experience. Dr. Wilkinson was awarded a Tier 1 Canada research chair in clean energy and fuel cells in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering at the University of British Columbia. He presently maintains a joint appointment with the university and the Canadian National Research Council Institute for Fuel Cell Innovation. [Pg.461]

Much of the work discussed above was performed under contract awarded by the Canada Departments of Supply and Services and Energy, Mines and Resources to the Waterloo Centre for Process Development. Dr. J.T. Price of CANMET was the supervising scientist on these contracts. His active participation was very much appreciated. [Pg.327]

Research in GDW s lab on aminoglycoside antibiotics has been funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and by a Canada Research Chair award. [Pg.137]

Sir Ernest Rutherford was born in 1871 in Nelson, New Zealand. After studying at New Zealand University and Cambridge, he went to Canada in 1898 as a professor of physics at McGill University. After serving there for nine years and carrying out many remarkable researches in radioactivity, he became professor of physics at Manchester University, and in the following year he was awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry. In 1919 he became a professor at Cambridge (72). [Pg.815]

One of the authors (T.D.N.) gratefully acknowledges the award of research associateship from the National Research Council of Canada. [Pg.164]

We thank the National Science and Engineering Research Council (Canada) for financial support of this work, for an International Scientific Exchange Award (R. K.), and for an International Fellowship (G. S.). The assistance of Mr. Dale Wood is gratefully acknowledged. [Pg.111]

This work was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada. Dr. Bosnich is pleased to acknowledge the Killam Foundation for awarding him a Killam Fellowship. [Pg.349]

Robert West was bom in New Jersey and educated at Cornell University (B.A.) and Harvard University (A.M., Ph.D.). For the past 45 years he has been a faculty member in the chemistry department at the University of Wisconsin, where he is now E. G. Rochow Professor and Director of the Organosilicon Research Center. His many awards include the Frederick Stanley Kipping Award, the Wacker silicone prize, the Alexander von Humboldt Award, and the main group chemistry medal. He has published more than 600 scientific papers, mostly in the area of silicon chemistry. Major discoveries in his laboratories include the first soluble polysilanes (1978), the silicon-silicon double bond (1981), the first stable silylenes (1994), and electrically conducting organosilanes for high energy density batteries (2000). He is an airplane pilot and a mountaineer, with numerous first ascents in Canada and Alaska. [Pg.353]

Of the 146 plenary lecturers so far, only three (Lemieux, Montreuil, and Sinay) gave three lectures. If the Whistler Award lecture is counted as a plenary lecture, then the names of Bock and Wong can be added to this list. There were 19 who delivered two plenary lectures each. One third (53) of the plenary lecturers came from the USA, followed by 22 from the UK and 15 from Canada. Altogether, 22 nations have provided plenary lecturers. [Pg.44]

The Conformations of Methyl a-Maltoside and Related Structures, E. Alvarado, A. Ragauskas, R. U. Lemieux, and K. Bock, Abstr. Symp. on Occasion of Professor Leslie Hough receiving Claude S. Hudson Award, Third Chemical Congress of North America, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, June 5-10 (1988). [Pg.32]


See other pages where Canada Award is mentioned: [Pg.499]    [Pg.499]    [Pg.515]    [Pg.332]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.128]    [Pg.296]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.456]    [Pg.312]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.399]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.70]    [Pg.216]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.238]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.40]    [Pg.991]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.476]    [Pg.444]    [Pg.515]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.13]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.181 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.181 ]




SEARCH



Awards

© 2024 chempedia.info