Charles Edward Munroe
#76,900
Most Influential Person Across History
American chemist
Charles Edward Munroe's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
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Chemistry
Charles Edward Munroe's Degrees
- PhD Chemistry University of Göttingen
Why Is Charles Edward Munroe Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Charles Edward Munroe was an American chemist, discoverer of the Munroe effect, and chair of the department of chemistry at the George Washington University. He was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts and studied at the Lawrence scientific school of Harvard, graduating in 1871. He then took a job as an assistant professor of chemistry at the college until 1874, when he moved to Annapolis to become a professor of chemistry at the United States Naval Academy.
Charles Edward Munroe'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
- Washington's Relation to the Dye Industry Prior to 1914 (1924) (15)
- Wave-like effects produced by the detonation of gun-cotton (1888) (10)
- THE DETERMINATION OF THE RELATIVE SENSITIVENESS OF EXPLOSIVE SUBSTANCES THROUGH “EXPLOSIONS BY INFLUENCE.” (5)
- Scientific Books: The Rise and Progress of the British Explosives Industry (1909) (4)
- ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF SMOKELESS POWDER. (1896) (4)
- Explosions Caused by Commonly Occurring Substances (1899) (3)
- Precious Metals Recovered by Cyanide Processes (1905) (3)
- Physical Testing of Explosives at the Bureau of Mines Explosives Experiment Station, Bruceton, Pennsylvania (1931) (3)
- By-products in gas manufacture (1912) (3)
- International Chemical Congresses. (1894) (2)
- A HANDBOOK OF MODERN EXPLOSIVES. (1898) (2)
- RECENT OBSERVATIONS ON EXPLOSIVE AGENTS. (1884) (2)
- The Manufacture of Explosives (1896) (2)
- THE THIRD INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF APPLIED CHEMISTRY. (1898) (2)
- Regulation of Explosives in the United States: with Especial Reference to the Administration of the Explosives Act of October 6, 1917, by the Bureau of Mines (2)
- THE CHEMICAL INDUSTRIES OF AMERICA. (1910) (2)
- CORRESPONDENCE RELATING TO THE BERZELIUS MEMORIAL SERVICES. (1899) (2)
- INSPECTION OF COTTON FOR USE IN THE MANUFACTURE OF GUNCOTTON.1 (1895) (1)
- Importance of teaching chemistry (1)
- EXPLOSIVE MATERIALS. The Phenomena and Theories of Explosion and the Classification, Constitution, and Preparation of Explosives. (1898) (1)
- PRELIMINARY REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON THE TARIFF. (1894) (1)
- THE COMPOSITION OF CERTAIN MODERN POWDERS. (1)
- Contributions to chemistry from the laboratory of the Lawrence Scientific School; No. 14, On the estimation of phosphoric acid (1871) (1)
- Fifth General Meeting (1893) (1)
- The cyanide industry theoretically and practically considered (1)
- The Manufacture of Explosives—Twenty Years' Progress (1909) (0)
- Filtration with Filters of Metallic Felt (1888) (0)
- “Permissible Explosives” Not “Permissible” Unless Correctly Used2 (1928) (0)
- The Audibility of Sound (1918) (0)
- Alien Registration- Munroe, Charles E. (Kennebunkport, York County) (1940) (0)
- Destruction of Muscle Shoals Ammonium Nitrate by Fire and Explosion. (1925) (0)
- The gas light & coke company,1812–1912 (1914) (0)
- Smokeless Powder, Nitro-cellulose and Theory of the Cellulose Molecule (1901) (0)
- A singular case of corrosion of steel (1883) (0)
- Sand fusions from gun cotton (1917) (0)
- The Present Status of the Gas Industry and its Outlook. (1912) (0)
- The Consumption of Nitrate of Soda in the United States. (1909) (0)
- Historical Papers on Modern Explosives (1912) (0)
- Chapter XII. Industrial Chemistry (1926) (0)
- SMOKELESS POWDER, NITROCELLULOSE, AND THE THEORY OF THE CELLULOSE MOLECULE. (1902) (0)
- Investigations of explosives used in coal mines, with a chapter on the natural gas used at Pittsburgh (0)
- Note on the Production of Mercury Fulminate. (1912) (0)
- HENRY CARRINGTON BOLTON. (1903) (0)
- ORGANIZATION OF CHEMISTS IN THE UNITED STATES. (1925) (0)
- AMERICAN CONTEMPORARIES - Frank Wigglesworth Clarke (1923) (0)
- The Relations of Technical Chemistry to the other Sciences.—II (1904) (0)
- The production of explosives. (0)
- Contributions of the Chemist to the Explosives Industry. (1915) (0)
- The census of manufactures of 1900 (1903) (0)
- PECULIAR PERFORATION OF ZINC RODS. (1891) (0)
- Natural gas for Baltimore.Report to Robert J. McCuen, superintendent of lamps and lighting of the city of Baltimore, (0)
- Recent legislation relative to explosives in the mail and transportation (0)
- Artificial hematite crystals (1907) (0)
- Comminuted smokeless powder for blasting (1922) (0)
- ADDRESS AT THE UNVEILING OF THE BUST OF WOLCOTT GIBBS IN RUMFORD HALL, CHEMISTS' CLUB, NOVEMBER 25, 1911. (1911) (0)
- Mining Coal with Explosives (1910) (0)
- Burning of Two Hundred Thousand Pounds of Picric Acid at Sparta, Wisconsin (1922) (0)
- Testing Permissible Explosives (1935) (0)
- Methods of testing detonators (1924) (0)
- Historical Papers on Modern Explosives . By George W. MacDonald. Whittaker & Co., N. Y. 1912. Pp. 192. $2.50 net. (1912) (0)
- The Propagation of Explosions in Mixtures of Petroleum Vapor with Air in Tubes (0)
- Chapter IV. The First General Meeting and the First Local Selection of the American Chemical Society (1926) (0)
- The Commercial Manufacture of Amorphous Calcium Phosphide. (1909) (0)
- NOTES ON MILITARY EXPLOSIVES. (0)
- The drying of gunpowder magazines (1884) (0)
- A Lesson from History--Lest We Forget (0)
- WHY STUDY CHEMISTRY (1924) (0)
- EASY EXPERIMENTS OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY. (1899) (0)
- DETERMINATIONS OF THE FIRING POINTS OF VARIOUS EXPLOSIVES. (1890) (0)
- THE AUDIBILITY OF SOUND. (1918) (0)
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