Edward Curtis Franklin
American chemist
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Chemistry
Edward Curtis Franklin's Degrees
- Bachelors Chemistry Johns Hopkins University
Why Is Edward Curtis Franklin Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Edward Curtis Franklin was an American chemist. Biography Edward Franklin was born in Geary County, Kansas. He entered the University of Kansas at the age of 22, obtaining his major in chemistry in 1888. Two years later he decided to study at the University of Berlin for one year, but abandon it by 1891. In 1892 he came back to State University where he remained till 1893 working as assistant chemist. He graduated from Johns Hopkins University where he received his doctorate in chemistry a year later. He then came back to University of Kansas where he spent one year as a chemist while the rest of the years he was an associate professor there. He also worked as associate manager for a mining project in Costa Rica where he remained till he was informed about coming to Stanford University in 1903. From 1911 to 1913 he served as chief of the division of chemistry of the Public Health Service in Washington state. As life went by, he started to receive honours from home and abroad including Nichols and Willard Gibbs Awards. He was elected as a president of the American Chemical Society and became a member of both the National Academy of Sciences and the American Philosophical Society. Franklin got invited to participate at the British Association for the Advancement of Science at Melbourne, Australia, and Johannesburg, South Africa. He died on February 13, 1937, from coronary thrombosis.
Edward Curtis Franklin's Published Works
Published Works
- THE AMMONO CARBONIC ACIDS (1922) (161)
- Heterocyclic Nitrogen Compounds. I. Pentacyclic Compounds. (1935) (70)
- The Nitrogen System of Compounds (1934) (48)
- REACTIONS IN LIQUID AMMONIA.1 (1905) (33)
- The Electrical Conductivity of Aqueous Solutions (1908) (25)
- The Hofmann-Beckmann-Curtius-Lossen Rearrangements. (1934) (21)
- Report of the Selby Smelter Commission (1915) (20)
- Reaktionen in flüssigem Ammoniak (1905) (16)
- SYSTEMS OF ACIDS, BASES AND SALTS (1924) (15)
- The electrical conductivity of liquid ammonia solutions. III (1905) (13)
- Potassium Ammonosodiate, Potassium Ammonolithiate, and Rubidium Ammonosodiate, and Rubidium Ammonolithiate (12)
- ON THE VELOCITIES OF THE IONS IN LIQUID AMMONIA SOLUTIONS. (1904) (12)
- THE ACTION OF POTASSIUM AMIDE ON CUPRIC NITRATE IN LIQUID AMMONIA SOLUTION.: (CUPROUS IMIDE, CUPROUS NITRIDE AND POTASSIUM AMMONOCUPRITE.) (1912) (9)
- Metallic Salts of Pyrrol, Indol, and Carbazol (8)
- Reactions in Liquid Ammonia (8)
- POTASSIUM AMMONOMAGNESATE, Mg(NHK)2.2NH3. (1913) (7)
- The Action of Potassium Amide. on Thallium Nitrate in Liquid Ammonia Solutions (6)
- REACTIONS IN LIQUID AMMONIA. II.: 1. THE ACTION OF ACID AMIDES ON THE AMIDES, IMIDES AND NITRIDES OF CERTAIN HEAVY METALS. 2. METALLIC SALTS OF ACID AMMONO ESTERS. (1915) (6)
- Conductivity and Viscosity in Mixed Solvents (1908) (6)
- The Electrical Conductivity of Liquid Sulphur Dioxide Solutions at –35.5°, –20°, –10°, o° and + 10° (4)
- ON THE MERCURY NITROGEN COMPOUNDS (4)
- A New Era in Chemistry (1914) (4)
- Metallic Salts of Carboxazylic Acids1 (1933) (3)
- Metallic Salts of Ammono Acids. (1915) (2)
- AMMONOBASIC ALUMINIUM IODIDES. (1915) (2)
- POTASSIUM AMMONOTITANATE—N ≅ Ti-NHK.2 (1912) (2)
- Experimental Determination of the Heat of Volatilization of Liquid Ammonia at Its Boiling-Point (2)
- Some Ammonolytic Reactions1 (1933) (2)
- Potassium Ammono Plumbite (2)
- POTASSIUM AMMONOBARATE, AMMONOSTRONTIATE AND AMMONOCALCIATE. (1915) (1)
- Hydrocyanic Acid: an Ammono, Carbonous Acid, an Ammono Formaldehyde, and a Formic Anammonide (1)
- Edward Curtis Franklin, 1862-1937 (1937) (1)
- THE ELECTRICAL CONDUCTIVITY OF METHYLAMINE SOLUTIONS. (1907) (1)
- Potassium Ammono Argenate, Barate, Calciate, and Sodate. (1915) (0)
- Metallic Salts of Pyrrol, Indol, and Carbazol. (1919) (0)
- The Relative Bitterness of Different Bitter Substances (0)
- THE PRIESTLEY MEMORIAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY. (1917) (0)
- REPORT OF THE PACIFIC COAST SUBCOMITTEE OF THE COMMITTEE OF ONE HUNDRED ON RESEARCH. (1916) (0)
- TEXT-BOOK OF GENERAL PHYSICS FOR HIGH SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. (0)
- Ammonobasic Iodides of Aluminium. (1915) (0)
- Note - The Instability of Alloxan. (1910) (0)
- Effect of sulfur dioxide on growing barley (0)
- Eminent American Chemists (1924) (0)
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