Robert Whytlaw-Gray
#113,009
Most Influential Person Across History
English chemist
Robert Whytlaw-Gray's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
Robert Whytlaw-Graychemistry Degrees
Chemistry
#3415
Historical Rank
Physical Chemistry
#1011
Historical Rank

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Chemistry
Robert Whytlaw-Gray's Degrees
- Bachelors Chemistry University of Oxford
Why Is Robert Whytlaw-Gray Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Robert H. Whytlaw-Gray, OBE, FRS was an English chemist, born in London. He studied at the University of Glasgow and University College London and was Professor of Inorganic Chemistry at the University of Leeds. He and William Ramsay isolated radon and studied its physical properties .
Robert Whytlaw-Gray'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
- Smokes: Part I.—A study of their behaviour and a method of determining the number of particles they contain (1923) (20)
- LXXX. Experiments on the rate of evaporation of small spheres as a method of determining diffusion coefficients.— The diffusion coefficient of iodine (1927) (20)
- Smoke : a study of aerial disperse systems (1932) (17)
- 295. The preparation and properties of disulphur decafluoride (1934) (14)
- The Critical Constants and Orthobaric Densities of Xenon (1912) (14)
- The influence of pressure on the coagulation of ferric oxide smokes (1936) (14)
- The Atomic Weight of Radium (1912) (12)
- The process of coagulation in smokes (1929) (8)
- The Structure and Electrification of Smoke Particles (1929) (8)
- The adsorption error in the determination of gaseous densities and the adsorption of gases on vitreous silica (1939) (8)
- A sedimentation method of finding the number of particles in smokes (1936) (7)
- Disperse systems in gases (1936) (7)
- A Significant Error in the Determination at Low Pressures of the Virial Coefficients of Vapours (1957) (6)
- The Atomic Weight of Fluorine. (1931) (5)
- The Coagulation of Smokes and the Theory of Smoluchowski (1927) (5)
- Preparation of Protium Oxide and Determination of the Proportion of Deuterium in the Hydrogen of Normal Water (1934) (5)
- An accurate method for comparing the compressibilities of gases below atmospheric pressure (5)
- Higher Homologues of Sulphur Hexafluoride (1933) (5)
- Thirteenth report of the Committee on Atomic Weights of the International Union of Chemistry. (1940) (5)
- 209. A comparison of the densities of carbon monoxide and oxygen, and the atomic weight of carbon (1933) (4)
- A Novel Magneto-Optical Effect (1921) (3)
- 373. The molecular weight and limiting density of propane (1949) (3)
- The mercury meniscus in precision measurements on gases (1948) (3)
- Radium-D and the Final Product of the Radium Disintegration Series (1913) (3)
- The Atomic Weight of Xenon (1931) (2)
- 607. The normal density of propane and its expansion coefficients between 0° and 20° (1949) (2)
- Second Virial Coefficient of Methyl Chloride Vapour (1958) (2)
- The Atomic Weight of Xenon. (1931) (2)
- The Volume Coefficients of Expansion of Several Gases at Pressures Below One Metre (1934) (2)
- Magnetic Double Refraction of Smokes (1921) (1)
- Smokes: Part II. A Method of Determining the Size of the Particles in Smokes (1923) (1)
- Adsorption on surfaces of vitreous silica of known geometric area (1958) (1)
- Additions and Corrections. Ninth Report on the Committee on Atomic Weights of the International Union of Chemistry. (1939) (0)
- Smokes as Aerial Colloids (1926) (0)
- Tellurium Tetrafluoride (1938) (0)
- Aerosols, or solid disperse systems in air (1922) (0)
- Atomic Weight of Fluorine (1932) (0)
- Double-Image Effect in Transparent Microscopic Spheres (1927) (0)
- Thirteenth report of the Committee on Atomic Weights of the International Union of Chemistry. (1947) (0)
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