John Mallet
Irish-American chemist
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Chemistry
John Mallet's Degrees
- Bachelors Chemistry Trinity College Dublin
- Masters Chemical Engineering University of California, Berkeley
Why Is John Mallet Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, John William Mallet FRS was an Irish chemist who lived and worked in the United States. Biography John William Mallet was born near Dublin to Robert Mallet and Cordelia Mallet . Robert Mallet was a civil engineer and a fellow of the Royal Society and other societies and had an ample scientific library which his son had explored. Before entering college, John was attending private lessons in chemistry and at the age of 17 was admitted to Trinity College Dublin, where he obtained the degree Bachelor of Arts in 1853. During his college years, Mallet assisted his father in seismological studies, received a gold medal in experimental physics, and published a paper on "Chemical examination of Killiney" in 1849, just after entering college. In the summers of 1851 and 1852 he went to the University of Göttingen where he attended the lectures of Friedrich Wöhler and received a degree in 1852. He presented the associated thesis on the chemical composition of Celtic antiquities to the museum of the Royal Irish Academy.
John Mallet's Published Works
Published Works
- XIII.—On aluminum nitride, and the action of metallic aluminum upon sodium carbonate at high temperatures (7)
- Stas memorial lecture. I.—Jean-Servais Stas, and the measurement of the relative masses of the atoms of the chemical elements (6)
- A stony meteorite from Coon Butte, Arizona (1906) (3)
- A Good Suggestion (1877) (3)
- Some Remarks on a Passage in Professor Sylvester's Paper as to the Atomic Theory (2)
- On a fourth mass of meteoric iron from Augusta County, Virginia (1878) (2)
- On sipylite, a new niobate from Amherst County, Virginia (1877) (2)
- On the chemical composition of guanajuatite, or selenide of bismuth, from Guanajuato, Mex (1878) (1)
- XXX.—ON THE PROPERTIES OF PURE METALLIC ALUMINUM. (1882) (1)
- XXII. Revision of the atomic weight of aluminum (1)
- Revision of the Atomic Weight of Gold (1)
- II. Revision of the atomic weight of gold (1)
- On the constitutional formulae of urea, uric acid, and other derivatives (1876) (1)
- On three masses of meteoric iron from Augusta County, Virginia (1871) (1)
- XLIX.—On certain new reactions of tungsten (1)
- On the Structure of Gold-Leaf, and the Absorption Spectrum of Gold (1)
- XLIII. Analysis of a siliceous deposit from the hot volcanic springs of Taupo, New Zealand (1853) (1)
- XLIV. On the apparent alteration in weight of a wire placed east and west and traversed by an electric current (1877) (1)
- On barcenite, a new antimonate from Huitzuco. Mex (1878) (1)
- Cotton : the chemical, geological, and meteorological conditions involved in its successful cultivation. with an account of the actual conditions and practice of culture in the southern or cotton states of North America (1)
- On the Density of Solid Mercury (1)
- On osmious acid, and the position of osmium in the list of elements (1860) (1)
- Results of the interaction of mercury with alloys of other metals (1908) (1)
- XIV.—Note on the fluid contained in a cavity in fluorspar (0)
- On a mass of meteoric iron from Wichita County, Texas (1884) (0)
- LIII.—On chlor-stannic acid (0)
- XXXIII. On Brewsterite (1859) (0)
- The Distance to which the Firing of Heavy Guns is Heard (1900) (0)
- ON THE FRACTIONAL DE-HYDRATION OF AMMONIUM ALUM, AND THE ATOMICITY OF ALUMINUM. (1882) (0)
- XLVI.—On achrematite, a new molybdo-arsenate of lead, from Mexico (0)
- On the structure of gold leaf and the absorption spectrum of gold (0)
- On limonite with the color and translucency of goethite (1875) (0)
- III. Revision of the atomic weight of aluminium (0)
- XXI. Analysis of euclase (1853) (0)
- XIII. Note on the bearing on the atomic weight of aluminium of the fact that this metal occludes hydrogen (0)
- XL. On osmious acid, and the position of osmium in the list of elements (1860) (0)
- XIV.—On the volatility of barium, strontium, and calcium (0)
- On a zeolitic mineral (allied to stilbite) from the isle of Skye, Scotland (1856) (0)
- I. On the occurrence of silver in volcanic ash from the eruption of Cotopaxi of July 22nd and 23rd, 1885 (0)
- On the crystallization of platinum from fusion (1856) (0)
- On the Influence of Light upon the Explosion of Nitrogen Iodide (1888) (0)
- XLI. On a new fossil resin (1852) (0)
- I. On a second case of the occurrence of silver in volcanic dust, namely, in that thrown out in the eruption of Tunguragua in the Andes of Ecuador, January 11th, 1886 (0)
- On the crystalline form of sipylite (1881) (0)
- X. On the chemical and physical conditions of the culture of cotton (0)
- II. Examination of the gases occluded in meteoric iron from augusta co., Virginia (0)
- Note on a case of artificial crystallization of metallic copper and di-oxyd of copper (1860) (0)
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