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  • A [[chemist]] working on [[solubility]]; created the first [[open notebook]], which lai
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  • (1867-1934), Polish-French physicist (Nobel Prize in 1903) and chemist (Nobel Prize in 1911), famous for her work on radioactivity.
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  • (3 December 1842 – 30 March 1911) American industrial and environmental chemist in the United States in the 1800s, pioneering the field of home economics.
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  • A [[chemist]] and [[open science]] advocate; [[Vice President]] for Strategic Developme
    223 bytes (28 words) - 18:16, 19 April 2010
  • German chemist, inventor of the Haber-Bosch process for the production of ammonia, Nobelis
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  • ...g, August 14, 1777 – Copenhagen, March 9, 1851) Danish physicist and chemist best known for his discovery of the influence of an electric current on the
    237 bytes (32 words) - 08:07, 21 June 2008
  • (1791 – 1867) Was an English physicist and chemist whose best known work was on the closely connected phenomena of electricity
    248 bytes (32 words) - 06:01, 20 May 2008
  • A '''chemist''' is a practitioner of the science of [[chemistry]]. Chemists and [[chemic
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  • (1870 – 1915) [[German]] [[chemist]] and the first female to obtain a [[doctorate]] at the [[University of Bre
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  • A [[physical chemistry|physical chemist]], currently Institute Professor at the [[Massachusetts Institute of Techno
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  • *An introduction to Open science by chemist [[Matthew Todd]] who uses it to synthesize chemicals that help fight [[schi
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  • {{r|Chemist}}
    503 bytes (64 words) - 09:07, 13 August 2009
  • ...ng through a liquid phase. The example most likely to be observed by non-[[chemist]]s is the conversion of [[dry ice]] into [[carbon dioxide]] gas. In chemis
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  • A prestigious annual [[prize]] awarded according to the [[will]] of Swedish [[chemist]] and [[entrepreneur]] [[Alfred Nobel]] in the categories [[Nobel Prize for
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  • *Dietrich Stoltzenberg, ''Fritz Haber: Chemist, Nobel Laureate, German, Jew'', translated from the German by Charles Passa
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  • ...theory. Through his lifetime John Dalton became a well known and respected chemist and physicist.
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  • (1834-1907) [<small>MEN</small>-de-LAY-ev), Russian chemist, discovered that ordering the then (1869) known [[chemical elements]], sixt
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  • ...]], where he lived for the rest of his life, and set up as a manufacturing chemist under the name of Bevans and Cookworthy. In 1735 he married Sarah Berry, w == Chemist and mineralogist ==
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  • '''Ellen Henrietta Swallow Richards''' (1842-1911) was a prominent American chemist best known for pioneering domestic science or [[home economics]]. She also
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  • ...s were compiled by William Henry (1774-1836), the Manchester physician and chemist, some of whose own lecture notes are also preserved."'' |title=Irish links of the multinational chemist Joseph Black (1728-1799).
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  • ...April 1, 1865 &ndash; [[Göttingen]], September 23, 1929 ) was an Austrian chemist. Together with [[Heinrich Siedentopf]] he invented in 1903 the [[ultramic
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  • * Alfred Bader and Leonard Parker, ''Joseph Loschmidt, Physicist and Chemist'', Physics Today, vol. '''54'''(3), p. 45 (2001) [http://ptonline.aip.org/
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  • *[[Emil Abderhalden]], (1877&ndash;1950), Swiss chemist *[[Richard Abegg]], (1869&ndash;1910), German chemist
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  • ...F. Libby''' (December 17, 1908 &ndash; September 8, 1980) was an American chemist. In 1960 he was the [[Nobel Prize in Chemistry]] for his work on developin
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  • {{r|Chemist}}
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  • {{r|Chemist}}
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  • ...itish]] person to go into [[outer space|space]]. Sharman was a [[chemistry|chemist]] who answered an advertisement to go into space as part of a [[Soviet Unio
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  • ...ro]], but it was not generally accepted until after 1858, when the Italian chemist, [[Stanislao Cannizzaro]] constructed a logical system of chemistry based o
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  • ...Elemental magnesium was first isolated by Sir [[Humphrey Davy]], a British chemist.
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  • The first detailed report on color blindness was written by the British chemist [[John Dalton]], who was himself afflicted with it.
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  • ...versunda]] ([[Sweden]]) 20 Aug 1779 - Stockholm, 7 Aug 1848) was a Swedish chemist and naturalist. He is considered one of the founders of modern chemistry.
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  • ...ranose]], respectively, as shown in the illustration. In 1891, the German chemist [[Emil Fischer]] elucidated the structure of D-glucose.
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  • ...ignificant contributions to science. However, Dimitri Mendeleev, a Russian chemist, had predicted their existence years before. In 1871. Mendeleev had publish
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  • ...Biot''' (1774-1862) was a French physicist, mathematician, astronomer, and chemist.
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  • ...hysicist's ''amu'' ( = 1/1.000&thinsp;317&thinsp;9 ''u'') and there is the chemist's ''amu'' ( = 1/1.000&thinsp;043 ''u''). Because chemists and physicists no Much earlier, the first standardization of atomic mass was made by the chemist [[John Dalton]] in the early nineteenth century, who introduced the mass of
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  • ...r in [[Westport]]. Originally he studied [[Medicine]] but later became a [[Chemist]]. He joined the Irish Republican Brotherhood and later became involved wit
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  • ...y 20, 1758&ndash;February 10, 1836) was the wife of the great 18th century chemist [[Antoine Lavoisier]], whom she married on December 16, 1771 when she was n
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  • ...armth, sympathy, and understanding may outweigh the surgeon's knife or the chemist's drug.<br/>
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  • ...mentally 'bottom-up' approach to understanding biology in keeping with the chemist's natural enthusiasm and appreciation for molecular structure and behaviour
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  • The German chemist [[Eilhard Mitscherlich]] first discovered allotropy, in sulfur.
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  • ...at [[Boston University]]. He described himself as a mediocre experimental chemist and academic researcher; his talents did not run to producing the type of f
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  • ...its secretary. The organisations membership also included scientists; the chemist [[Carl l. Alsberg]] and the physicist [[Richard C. Tolman]], some medical d
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  • *[[George Washington Carver]], black chemist
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  • The process of radiocarbon dating was invented by American chemist [[Willard Libby]] in the 1940s and received a [[Nobel Prize in Chemistry|No
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  • ...his is just a brief survey to illustrate the various pieces of glassware a chemist might use on a daily basis.
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  • ...distributed the original mould, unsuccessfully trying to get help from any chemist that had enough skill to make a stable form of it for mass production.
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  • ...ant in France in 1837. However, its use was not widespread until a British chemist, [[John Glover]], invented an improved version of the tower, patented in [ ...el's process were unsuccessful. In 1863, some fifty years later, a Belgian chemist, Ernest Solvay, successfully applied Fresnel's process using a tall gas abs
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  • ...quality''. The use of energy also has similarities to the works of British chemist Professor Fredrick Soddy.
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  • ...ant in France in 1837. However, its use was not widespread until a British chemist, [[John Glover]], invented an improved version of the tower, patented in [ ...el's process were unsuccessful. In 1863, some fifty years later, a Belgian chemist, Ernest Solvay, successfully applied Fresnel's process using a tall gas abs
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  • ...esent the results of the analysis, but his subjective interpretation, as a chemist, is worthless; an expert in statistics is required to present a legal inter
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  • Environmental [[chemist]]s draw on a range of concepts from [[Chemistry|chemistry]] and various env
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  • ...704jt077r226106/fulltext.pdf Jöns Jacob Berzelius A Guide to the Perplexed Chemist] Jaime Wisniak, Chemical Engineering Department, [[Ben-Gurion University of
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  • ...mist, James Anderson, a lawyer and agronomist, Joseph Black, physicist and chemist, and James Hutton, the first modern geologist.<ref> Denby, op. cit. Repchec
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  • ...returned to MIT for a year as a research associate followed by a year as a chemist in a leather [[tannery]]. He then joined the faculty of MIT as an assistant Lewis's early work as a chemist at a leather tannery got him interested in [[colloid|colloidal phenomena]],
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  • * [[Michael Smith (chemist)|Michael Smith]] (awarded 1993), for his fundamental contributions to the e
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  • | title = The Chemist's War: The Little-Told Story of How the U.S. Government Poisoned Alcohol Du
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  • In 1675, hydrometers were developed by [[Robert Boyle]], a British chemist and physicist. Around 1798, [[Antoine Baumé]], a French scientist, designe
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  • ...tml Alfred Nobel biography]</ref> visited the Paris laboratory of a famous chemist, Professor T. J. Pelouze. There, he met Ascanio Sobrero who, three years ea
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  • [[John Dalton]], an [[English]] chemist, meteorologist and physicist, first propounded his law of partial pressures William Henry, an English chemist, formulated Henry's law in 1803. It stated that:
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  • [[John Dalton]], an [[English]] chemist, meteorologist, and physicist, first propounded his law of partial pressure William Henry, an English chemist, formulated Henry's law in 1803. It stated that:
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  • ...came a prominent member of the [[Scottish Enlightenment]], a friend of the chemist [[Joseph Black]], the political economist [[Adam Smith]], the philosopher a
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  • ...ectronegativity scale|Pauling scale]] (named after [[Nobel Prize]] winning Chemist [[Linus Pauling]]) is the first proposed<ref>http://osulibrary.oregonstate.
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  • ...ch (1940) who had already relocated to UCLA from Istanbul, and theoretical chemist Fritz London who was at Duke University, Kantorowicz was released because
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  • }}</ref> Turing was an amateur [[chemistry|chemist]] and it is possible he died from accidentally inhaling [[cyanide]] rather
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  • * [[John Ross (chemist)|John Ross]]
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  • ...reaction is known a [[Fischer esterification]], named after the [[German]] chemist [[Hermann Emil Fischer]] (1852 - 1919). ...800 by [[Joseph Priestly]] in [[England]] and by the [[Netherlands|Dutch]] chemist [[Martinus van Marum]], both of whom made observations on the [[dehyrogenat
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  • ...ust 14, 1777 &ndash; Copenhagen, March 9, 1851) was a Danish physicist and chemist. He is best known for his discovery of the influence of an electric curren
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  • ...sly carried out, led to the mini-scandal over the case of Thomas Titley, a chemist who was suspected of providing abortifacients. Under the incautious hand of
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  • ...their research.</ref> and he continued, until 1940, to try and interest a chemist skilled enough to further refine usable penicillin. ...uld for twelve years, and continued until 1940 to try to get help from any chemist that had enough skill to make a stable form of it for mass production. Ther
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  • ...ready known to the police, has secured a supply of Mecron and, while their chemist in Turkey attempts to duplicate the drug, has killed at least one man in Lo
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  • ...separate a physical system from the surroundings. For instance, a physical chemist studying a system consisting of
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  • ...was known. The arrangement of atoms by mass was thought of by the Russian chemist [[Dimitri Mendeleev|Dmitri Mendeléev]], who discovered that chemically sim
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  • As modern chemistry began to emerge, with the work of the French chemist, [[Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier]] (1743-1794), chemists viewed '''oxidation''' Prior to Lavoisier, the chemist, [[Georg Ernst Stahl]] (1660-1734), taught that oxidation, as it came to be
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  • ...tor of ''Nature'', John Maddox, American scientific fraud investigator and chemist Walter Stewart, and "professional [[pseudoscience]] debunker" [[James Randi ...thdrawn, and his lab was eventually closed. According to Lionel Milgrom, a chemist and homoeopath who corresponded with Benveniste, "The knocks that he took m
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  • ...e.g., ([[ethylene]], [[benzene]]) was discovered by the [[France|French]] chemist, [[Paul Sabatier]].<ref>Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences (C.R.Aca Soon after Sabatier's work, a [[Germany|German]] chemist, Wilhelm Normann, found that catalytic hydrogenation could be used to conve
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  • A minimal account of matter from the chemist´s classical perspective requires discussion of the meanings of the terms ' ...it or unit of matter, to a tangible sample of matter &mdash; matter from a chemist's perspective.
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  • ...e.g., ([[ethylene]], [[benzene]]) was discovered by the [[France|French]] chemist, [[Paul Sabatier]].<ref>C.R.Acad.Sci. 1897, 132, 210</ref><ref>C.R.Acad.Sci Soon after Sabatier's work, a [[Germany|German]] chemist, Wilhelm Normann, found that catalytic hydrogenation could be used to conve
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  • ...Ireland, January 25, 1627 &ndash; London, December 30, 1691) was a British chemist and physicist, mainly known for [[Ideal gas law|Boyle's law]] (1662) that s ...the first to describe [[hydrogen]] gas. Although he was probably the first chemist in the modern sense of the word, he still believed, as the alchemists did,
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  • [[France|French]] chemist [[Louis Pasteur]] was the first ''zymologist'', when in 1857 he connected y
    8 KB (1,169 words) - 06:27, 9 June 2009
  • ...ord "gas" was apparently proposed by the 17th century [[Flanders|Flemish]] chemist [[Jan Baptist van Helmont]], as a phonetic spelling of his [[Dutch language
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  • ...]] and proposed the Law of Simple Multiple Proportions (later confirmed by chemist Jöns Jacob Berzelius). Dalton’s hypothesis differed from earlier version
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  • ...[Sweden]] &ndash; December 10, 1896, [[Sanremo]], [[Italy]]) was a Swedish chemist, engineer, innovator, armaments manufacturer and the inventor of [[dynamite
    7 KB (1,127 words) - 09:02, 4 May 2024
  • In 1792, the [[Germany|German]] chemist [[Jeremias B. Richter]] first proposed the concept of the quantitative [[ma
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  • The poet Samuel Coleridge held readings and speeches for the family. The chemist Humphrey Davy was a frequent guest in Godwin’s house and so was the Veget ...in, was discussing questions of electricity together with his friends, the chemist Humphrey Davy and the surgeon Anthony Carlisle, who had discovered the phen
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  • In 1920, he emigrated to Germany and ended up working as a research chemist, and in 1926 a professor, at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Fiber Chemist
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  • ..., as the new element, [[gallium]], according to its discoverer, the French chemist, [[Paul Lecoq de Boisbaudran]], had a much different [[specific gravity]] t ...6%; font-size: 0.99em; font-family: Gill sans MT, Trebuchet MS;">Brilliant chemist, first-class physicist, a fruitful researcher in the field of hydrodynamics
    29 KB (4,352 words) - 06:36, 6 March 2024
  • ...ican theoretical physicist [[John C. Slater]] and the American theoretical chemist [[Linus Pauling]] to become the '''Valence-Bond (VB)''' [or '''Heitler-Lond
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  • ...came a member of the [[Académie des Sciences]] and was appointed Assistant Chemist at the Academy.
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  • ...1881 simultaneously by U.S. Army physician [[George Sternberg]] and French chemist [[Louis Pasteur]]. ''S. pneumoniae'' has been used to prove that genetic ma
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  • ...the responsibility of George Kistiakowsky's teams, making him, a physical chemist, as critical as any of the nuclear physicists. Kistiakowsky was later to b ...the responsibility of George Kistiakowsky's teams, making him, a physical chemist, as critical as any of the nuclear physicists. Kistiakowsky was later to b
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  • In 1870, [[Belgium|Belgian]] chemist Edmond J. DeSmedt laid the first true asphalt pavement in the [[United Stat
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  • Jaffe reports that the Swedish chemist, [[Jöns Jacob Berzelius]] (1779-1848), a contemporary of Dalton, stated Da
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  • ...h, and later the suffix "-ry" was added to this to describe the art of the chemist as "chemistry".
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  • ...cember 24, 1745 - April 19, 1813) was an [[American]] physician, educator, chemist, writer, and [[Founding Father]]. He was one of [[Pennsylvania (U.S. state
    9 KB (1,355 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • '''Henry's law''' is one of the [[gas laws]], formulated by the British chemist, William Henry, in 1803. It states that:
    11 KB (1,729 words) - 05:20, 3 September 2013
  • Swedish chemist [[Georg Brandt]] (1694–1768) is credited with isolating cobalt sometime b
    9 KB (1,307 words) - 09:37, 29 March 2024
  • ...Reaction] [[Encyclopedia Britannica]]</ref> In 1858, a [[Germany|German]] chemist, H. Eichhorn, proved that the ion exchange process in soil was a reversible
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  • ...l University of Amsterdam. Two of his notable colleagues were the physical chemist [[Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff]] and the biologist [[Hugo de Vries]]. As co
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  • ...l University of Amsterdam. Two of his notable colleagues were the physical chemist [[Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff]] and the biologist [[Hugo de Vries]]. As co
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  • ...for liquids heavier than water, were developed by the [[France|French]] chemist [[Antoine Baumé]] in 1768. It is widely used in industrial chemistry, [[ph
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