Bertram Steele
#155,968
Most Influential Person Across History
Australian scientist
Bertram Steele's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
Download Badge
Chemistry Physics
Bertram Steele's Degrees
- Bachelors Chemistry University of Melbourne
Why Is Bertram Steele Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Bertram Dillon Steele FRS was an Australian scientist, foundation professor of chemistry at the University of Queensland . Early life Steele was born in Plymouth, England, the son of Samuel Madden Steele, a surgeon, and his wife Hariette Sarah, née Acock. Steele was educated at the Plymouth Grammar School; he then began an apprenticeship with his father. Steele migrated to Australia in 1889, where he qualified as a pharmaceutical chemist at the Victorian College of Pharmacy where he won a gold medal in 1890. He then practised as a pharmacist.
Bertram Steele's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- Sensitive Micro-Balances and a New Method of Weighing Minute Quantities (1909) (21)
- LXIX.—The blue salt of Fehling's solution and other cuprotartrates (11)
- CCXXII.—The oxidation of phosphorous acid by iodine (10)
- XIII.—The solubility curves of the hydrates of nickel sulphate (9)
- CXLII.—A dynamical study of the Friedel-Crafts reaction (8)
- CCLXVII.—Binary mixtures of some liquefied gases (6)
- On the Liquefied Hydrides of Phosphorus, Sulphur, and the Halogens, as Conducting Solvents.--Part I (5)
- CLVI.—The velocity and mechanism of the reaction between iodine and hypophosphorous acid (5)
- LXXXV.—Dimethyldiacetylacetone, tetramethylpyrone, and orcinol derivatives from diacetylacetone (4)
- Electrolysis in liquefied sulphur dioxide (4)
- Hydrides of Boron (1937) (3)
- CIV.—A new method for the measurement of hydrolysis in aqueous solution based on a consideration of the motion of ions (3)
- CI.—Periodides of substituted oxonium derivatives (2)
- An Automatic Toepler Pump, designed to collect the gas from the apparatus being exhausted (2)
- The Halogen Hydrides as Conducting Solvents.--Part III. The Transport Numbers. Preliminary Notice (2)
- On the Accurate Measurement of Ionic Velocities, with Applications to Various Ions (2)
- XLVI.—The transport number of very dilute solutions (2)
- CXXXVI.—A new method for the measurement of hydrolysis in aqueous solutions, based on a consideration of the motion of ions. A correction (2)
- XII.—The hydrides of boron (2)
- The accurate measurement of ionic velocities (1905) (1)
- On the complex oxalates of cobalt and nickel (1)
- XC.An automatic Toepler pump, designed to collect the gas from the apparatus being exhausted (1910) (1)
- XLIV.—A new method for the measurement of ionic velocities in aqueous solution (1)
- CIX.—An accurate method of measuring the compressibilities of vapours (0)
- On the electrolysis of salt solutions in liquefied sulphur dioxide at low temperatures. Discussion (0)
- LV.—A new hydrogen sulphide generator (0)
- The Halogen Hydrides as Conducting Solvents.--Part IV. Preliminary Notice (0)
- On the electrolysis of salt solutions in liquefied sulphur dioxide at low temperatures (0)
- The measurement of ionic velocities in aqueous solution, and the existence of complex ions (0)
- The Vapour-Densities of some Carbon Compounds; an Attempt to Determine their correct Molecular Weights (1902) (0)
- An Attempt to Determine the Supposed Change in Weight Accompanying the Radio-active Disintegration of Radium (1910) (0)
This paper list is powered by the following services:
Other Resources About Bertram Steele
What Schools Are Affiliated With Bertram Steele?
Bertram Steele is affiliated with the following schools:
