Big Chemical Encyclopedia

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

Articles Figures Tables About

Dewar, Sir

De Moivre, Abraham 13n deBroglie, Louis 97n Debye, Petrus 344n Descartes, Rend 63n Dewar, Sir James 316n Dirac, PAM 264n... [Pg.411]

Dewar, Sir James (1842-1923) British chemist and physicist, born in Scotland. In 1875 he became a professor at (Dambridge University, while carrying out much of his experimental work at the Royal Institution in London. He began studying gases at low temperatures and in 1872 invented the Dewar flask. In 1891, together with Frederick Abel (1827-1902), he developed the smokeless propellant explosive cordite, and in 1898 was the first to liquefy hydrogen. [Pg.233]

Principia Philosophiae 1644), study of meteorology, causality ( cogito ergo sum ) Dewar (sir) James (1842-1923), Brit, chemists, obtained liquid hydrogen, worked with low temperatures (Dewar flask)... [Pg.457]

Dewar. Sir James (1842 1923) A Scottish chemist who was the first to liquify hydrogen in 1898 and later succeeded in soUdllying it He studied the magnetic properties of liquid oxygen and ozone, and the phosphorescence of substances at low temperatures. He invented the Dewar flaskfor keeping Uqulds at very low temperatures. [Pg.104]

August K cuU von Stradonitz, German chemist (1829-1896). Sir James Dewar. British chemist and physicist (1842-1923). [Pg.164]

Sir James Dewar, a Scottish negative charge, and ( Or" chemist and physicist, made closer. So the... [Pg.111]

Since black powder is relatively low in energy, it leaves a large proportion of corrosive solids after explosion and absorbs moisture readily, it was succeeded in late 1800s by smokeless gunpowder and picric acid. The first smokeless powder, known as cordite, was invented by tbe English chemists Sir James Dewar and Sir Frederick Augustus Abel in 1889. It was made in two forms a gelatinized nitrocellulose and a mixture of NC and NG with a small quantity of petroleum jelly added to act as a stabilizer. Smokeless powder soon became tbe primary ammunition for use in pistols. [Pg.70]

Sir James Dewar was born in Kincardine, Scotland, on September 20, 1842, the son of an innkeeper. He attended local schools until he was ten when he suffered a serious case of rheumatic fever lasting two years. During this period he built a violin, and music remained a lifelong interest of his. In 1858 he entered the University of Edinburgh. There he studied physics and chemistry. Dewar, in an early display of his dexterity, developed a mechanical model of Alexander Crum Brown s graphic notation for organic compounds. This was sent to Friedrich Kekule in Ghent who then invited Dewar to spend some time in his laboratory. [Pg.11]

Scottish chemist and physicist Sir James Dewar, the first person to liquefy hydrogen. [Pg.12]

Sir James Dewar Is cleverer than you are None of you asses Can condense gases. [Pg.234]

Dewar, J. (1927) Collected Papers of Sir fames Dewar (ed. L. Dewar), University Press, Cambridge, pp. 578-91. [Pg.22]

In 1956, Sirs and coworkers [6], followed by Dewar and James 2 years later [7], used ort/zo-protected phenols in attempts to generate poly-2,6-disubstituted-... [Pg.97]

Cordite, the smokeless powder adopted by the British Government, is the patent of the late Sir F.A. Abel and Sir James Dewar, and is somewhat similar to blasting gelatine. It is chiefly manufactured at the Royal Gunpowder Factory at Waltham Abbey, but also at two or three private factories, including those of the National Explosives Company Limited, the New Explosives Company Limited, the Cotton-Powder Company Limited, Messrs Kynock s, c. As first manufactured it consisted of gun-cotton 37 per cent., nitro-glycerine 58 per cent., and vaseline 5 per cent., but the modified cordite now made consists of 65 per cent, gun-cotton, 30 per cent, of nitro-glycerine, and 5 per cent, of vaseline. The gun-cotton used is composed chiefly of the... [Pg.76]


See other pages where Dewar, Sir is mentioned: [Pg.267]    [Pg.323]    [Pg.644]    [Pg.971]    [Pg.1324]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.299]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.267]    [Pg.323]    [Pg.644]    [Pg.971]    [Pg.1324]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.299]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.434]    [Pg.93]    [Pg.797]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.762]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.201]    [Pg.525]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.130]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.266]    [Pg.368]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.293]    [Pg.425]    [Pg.489]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.85]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.278 , Pg.762 ]




SEARCH



Dewar

Dewar, Sir James

© 2024 chempedia.info