The metadata subpage is missing. You can start it via filling in this form or by following the instructions that come up after clicking on the [show] link to the right.
|
Do you see this on PREVIEW? then SAVE! before following a link.
A - For a New Cluster use the following directions
Subpages format requires a metadata page.
Using the following instructions will complete the process of creating this article's subpages.
- Click the blue "metadata template" link below to create the page.
- On the edit page that appears paste in the article's title across from "
pagename = ".
- You might also fill out the checklist part of the form. Ignore the rest.
- For background, see Using the Subpages template Don't worry--you'll get the hang of it right away.
- Remember to hit Save!
the "metadata template".
However, you can create articles without subpages. Just delete the {{subpages}} template from the top of this page and this prompt will disappear. :) Don't feel obligated to use subpages, it's more important that you write sentences, which you can always do without writing fancy code.
|
B - For a Cluster Move use the following directions
The metadata template should be moved to the new name as the first step. Please revert this move and start by using the Move Cluster link at the top left of the talk page.
The name prior to this move can be found at the following link.
|
|
This is a list of famous chemists in alphabetical order.
A
- Emil Abderhalden, (1877–1950), Swiss chemist
- Richard Abegg, (1869–1910), German chemist
- Peter Agre, (1949-), American chemist and doctor, 2003 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Arthur Aikin, (1773–1855), English chemist and mineralogist
- Johan August Arfwedson, (1792–1841), Swedish chemist
- David Anthony Alberola, (1859–1927), American chemist and physicist
- Amedeo Avogadro, (1776–1856), Italian physicist
- Salim Ali, Indian Naturalist and an Ornithologist.
B
- Neil Bartlett, (born 1932), English/Canadian/American chemist
- Sir Derek Barton, (1918–1998), 1969 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Antoine Baum, (1728–1804), French chemist
- Claude Louis Berthollet, (1748–1822), French chemist
- Jöns Jakob Berzelius, (1779–1848), Swedish chemist
- Joseph Black, (1728–1799), chemist
- Carl Bosch, (1872–1940), German chemist
- Robert Boyle, (1627–1691), Irish pioneer of modern chemistry
- Johannes Nicolaus Brønsted, (1879–1947), Danish chemist
- Henri Braconnot, (1780–1855), French chemist and pharmacist
- Robert Wilhelm Bunsen, (1811–1899), German inventor, chemist
- Eduard Buchner, (1860–1917), 1907 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
C
- Melvin Calvin, (1911–1997), American chemist, winner of 1961 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Georg Ludwig Carius, (1829–1875), German chemist
- Heinrich Caro, (1834–1910), German chemist
- Wallace Carothers, (1896–1937), American chemist
- Henry Cavendish, (1731–1810), British scientist
- Yves Chauvin, (born 1930), 2005 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Elias James Corey, (born 1928), American organic chemist, winner of 1990 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- F. Albert Cotton
- Marie Curie, (1867–1934), Polish-born French radiation physicist, 1903 Nobel Prize in Physics
- Pierre Curie, (1859–1906), 1903 Nobel Prize in Physics
- Robert Curl, (born 1933), winner of 1996 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Theodor Curtius, (1857–1928), German chemist
D
- John Dalton, (1766–1844), physicist
- Carl Peter Henrik Dam, (1895–1976), Danish biochemist, winner of the 1943 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- Humphry Davy, (1778–1829)
- Peter Debye, (1884–1966)
- Sir James Dewar, (1842–1923)
- Otto Diels, (1876–1954), German chemist, winner of the 1950 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Edward Doisy, (born 1893), American biochemist, winner of the 1943 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- Davorin Dolar, (1921-2005), chemist from Univ. of Ljubljana
- Emmanuel Dongala, Congolese chemist and novelist
- Jean Baptiste Dumas, (1800–1884), French chemist
E
- Paul Ehrlich, (1854–1915), German chemist, winner of the 1908 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- Manfred Eigen, (born 1927), German chemist, winner of the 1967 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Arthur Eichengrün, (1867–1949)
- Emil Erlenmeyer, (1825–1909), German chemist
- Richard R. Ernst, (born 1933), 1991 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Hans von Euler-Chelpin, (1873–1964), Swedish chemist, winner of the 1929 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
F
- Michael Faraday (1791–1867), scientist
- Hermann Emil Fischer (1852–1919), not to be confused with:
- Franz Joseph Emil Fischer
- Ernst Gottfried Fischer (1754–1831), German chemist
- Hans Fischer (1881–1945), German organic chemist, 1930 Nobel prize winner
- Rosalind Franklin (1920–1958), British Chemist and Crystallographer
- Carl Remigius Fresenius (1818–1897), German chemist
- Wilhelm Fresenius (1913–2004), German chemist, great-grandson of Carl
- Alexander Naumovich Frumkin, (1895–1976), electrochemist
G
- Johan Gadolin, (1760–1852), Finnish chemist
- Victor Goldschmidt, (1888–1947) Father of Modern Geochemistry
- Ljubo Golic, (born 1932), chemist.
- Thomas Graham, (1805–1869), not to be confused with:
- William Hardin Graham ???
- Francois Auguste Victor Grignard, (1871–1935), 1912 Nobel Prize in Chemistry corecipient
- Robert H. Grubbs, (born 1942), 2005 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
H
- Fritz Haber, (1868–1934)
- Otto Hahn, (1879–1968)
- John Haldane,(1860–1936), British biochemist
- Odd Hassel, (1897–1981), Norwegian chemist 1969 Nobel prize in chemistry
- Charles Hatchett, (1765–1847), English chemist who discovered niobium
- Clayton Heathcock, American Chemist
- Dudley R. Herschbach, (1932-), American chemist, 1986 Nobel prize in chemistry
- Robert Havemann, (1910–1982), chemist.
- George de Hevesy, (1885–1966), chemist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in chemistry 1943
- J. H. van 't Hoff, (1852–1911), Dutch physical chemist, 1901 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Friedrich Hoffmann, (1660–1742), physician and chemist
- Roald Hoffmann, (born 1937), Polish-born American chemist, 1981 Nobel Prize in chemistry
- August Wilhelm von Hofmann, (1818–1892) German organic chemist
- Jaroslav Heyrovský, (1890–1967), Czech chemist, 1959 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Gerhard Herzberg, (1904–1999), German-Canadian chemist, 1971 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
I
J
K
- Paul Karrer, (1889–1971), 1937 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Karl Wilhelm Gottlob Kastner (1783–1857)
- Friedrich August Kekulé von Stradonitz, (1829–1896), German organic chemist
- Emil Knoevenagel, (1865–1921)
- Adolph Wilhelm Hermann Kolbe, (1818–1884)
- Izaak Kolthoff, (1894–1993) the "Father of Analytical Chemistry"
- Aleksandra Kornhauser, (born 1926), chemist.
- Harold Kroto, (born 1939), English chemist, 1996 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Richard Kuhn (1900–1967), 1938 chemistry Nobel laureate..
L
- Irving Langmuir, (1881–1957), chemist, physicist
- Antoine Lavoisier, (1743–1794), French pioneer chemist
- Eun Lee, (born 1946), Korean organic chemist
- Yuan T. Lee, (born 1936), winner of 1986 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Janez Levec, (born 1943), chemist.
- Primo Levi, (1919–1987), resistance fighter, chemist and novelist
- Gilbert N. Lewis, (1875–1946), American chemist and first Dean of the Berkeley College of Chemistry
- Joseph Lister, 1st Baron Lister, (1827–1912), English surgeon
- Henri Louis le Chatelier, (1850–1936)
- Willard Libby (1908–1980), American chemist, winner of 1960 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Justus von Liebig, (1803–1873), German inventor
- Christopher Longuet-Higgens, British Chemist
- Martin Lowry, (1874–1936), British chemist
M
- Vladimir Vasilevich Markovnikov, (1838–1904)
- Lise Meitner, (1878–1968), physicist
- Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev, (1834–1907), chemist, creator of the Periodic table of elements
- John Mercer, (1791–1866), chemist and industrialist
- Robert Bruce Merrifield, (1921–2006), solid-phase chemist
- Lothar Meyer, (1830–1895)
- Viktor Meyer, (1848–1897), not to be confused with :
- Kurt Heinrich Meyer
- Stanley Miller (born 1930), American chemist, best known for the Miller-Urey experiment
- Luis E. Miramontes (1925–2004), co-inventor of the contraceptive pill
- William A. Mitchell, (1911–2004), key inventor behind Pop Rocks, Tang, and Kool Whip
- Alexander Mitscherlic, (1836–1918), chemist
- Jacques Monod, (1910–1976), biochemist, winner of Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1965
- Peter Moore (born 1939), American biochemist, Sterling Professor of Chemistry at Yale University
- Henry Gwyn Jeffreys Moseley (1887-1915), English physicist, discovered Moseley's law.
- Robert S. Mulliken, (1896–1986), American physicist, chemist
N
O
P
- Paracelsus, (1493–1541), alchemist
- Rudolph Pariser, (born 1923), theoretical and organic chemist
- Robert G. Parr, (born 1921), theoretical chemist
- Louis Pasteur, (1822–1895), French biochemist
- Linus Pauling, (1901–1994), Nobel Prizes in chemistry and peace
- William Perkin, (1838–1907) British organic chemist and inventor of mauveine (dye)
- John A. Pople, (1925–2004), theoretical chemist, 1998 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Roy J. Plunkett, (1910–1994), discoverer of Teflon
- Fritz Pregl, (1869–1930), chemist, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1923.
- Vladimir Prelog, (1906–1998), 1975 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Joseph Priestley, (1733–1804)
- Ilya Prigogine, (1917–2003), 1977 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- John Charles Polanyi, (born 1929), Canadian chemist, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1986.
Q
R
- William Ramsay, (born 1852), Scottish chemist
- Henry Rapoport, American chemist, UC Berkeley
- Rhazes (Razi), (865–925)
- Marij Rebek, chemist.
- Henri Victor Regnault (1810–1878), French chemist and physicist
- Tadeus Reichstein, (1897–1996), chemist, 1950 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- Stuart A. Rice, (born 1932), physical chemist
- Ellen Swallow Richards, (1842–1911), industrial and environmental chemist.
- Jeremias Benjamin Richter (1762–1807), German chemist.
- H. M. Rouell, (1718–1779)
- Leopold Ruzicka, (1887–1976), 1939 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
S
- Paul Sabatier, (1854–1941), 1912 Nobel Prize in Chemistry corecipient
- Maks Samec, (1844–1889), Slovenian chemist.
- Carl Wilhelm Scheele, (1742–1786), Swedish 18th century chemist, discovered numerous elements
- Stuart L. Schreiber, (born 1956), American chemist, a pioneer in a field of chemical biology
- Richard R. Schrock, (born 1945), 2005 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Glenn T. Seaborg, (1912–1999), 1951 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Nils Gabriel Sefström, (1787–1845), chemist.
- Francesco Selmi, (1817–1881), Italian chemist.
- Nikolay Nikolayevich Semyonov, (1896–1986), physicist and chemist, 1956 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Israel Shahak, (1933–2001)
- K. Barry Sharpless, (born 1941), 2001 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Peter Schultz, American chemist
- Oktay Sinanoglu, (born 1935), Turkish chemist
- S.P.L. Sørensen, (1868–1939), Danish chemist
- Frederick Soddy, (1877–1956), British chemist, 1921 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Wendell Meredith Stanley, (1904–1971), 1946 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Branko Stanovnik, (born 1938), chemist.
- Hermann Staudinger, (1881–1965), polymer chemist, 1953 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Alfred Stock, (1876–1946)
- Daston Stocholm, (1884–1971), 1926 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Fraser Stoddart, (born 1945), Scottish chemist, a pioneer in the field of the mechanical bond
- Gilbert Stork
T
U
V
W
- Johannes Diderik van der Waals, (1837–1923)
- John Ernest Walker
- Alfred Werner, (1866–1919), 1913 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- George Whitesides, American chemist
- Heinrich Otto Wieland (1877–1957) German chemist 1927 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Harvey W. Wiley, (1844–1930), US chemist, Pure food & drug advocate
- Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson, (1921–1996), 1973 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Friedrich Woehler, (1800–1882), German chemist
- William Hyde Wollaston, (1766–1828), English chemist
- Robert B. Woodward (1917–1979), 1965 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Kurt Wüthrich, (born 1938), 2002 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Charles-Adolphe Wurtz, (1817–1884)
X
Y
Z
Content from Wikipedia