William F. Giauque AKA William Francis Giauque Born: 12-May-1895 Birthplace: Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada Died: 28-Mar-1982 Location of death: Berkeley, CA Cause of death: Accident - Fall
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Chemist Nationality: United States Executive summary: Adiabatic demagnetization Cryogenics chemist William F. Giauque was one of the first scientists to research extreme low-temperature phenomena, and won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1949. After high school he worked for two years for a chemical company, before deciding to pursue chemistry as a career and enrolling at the University of California at Berkeley. There he spent the next sixty-six years, uninterrupted by sabbaticals or visiting professorships elsewhere, from his arrival as a student in 1916 to the offer of a faculty position before graduation until his death as professor emeritus in 1982.
Working with Herrick L. Johnston (1898-1965) in 1929, he discovered the second and third isotopes of oxygen (mass 17 and 18). In 1926 he proposed an apparatus using adiabatic demagnetization to achieve temperatures near absolute zero, and by 1933 he had constructed a working machine and became the first scientist to achieve temperatures colder than -458� Fahrenheit (within about one and a half degrees of absolute zero). He never smoked, drank alcoholic beverages, or learned to drive an automobile. Father: William Tecumseh Sherman Giauque (cabinet maker, d. 1908) Mother: Isabella Jane Duncan (seamstress) Wife: Muriel Frances Ashley (chemist, m. 19-Jul-1932, d. 28-Jul-1981, two sons) Son: William Francis Ashley Giauque Son: Robert David Ashley Giauque
High School: Niagara Falls Collegiate Institute, Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada (1914) University: BS, University of California at Berkeley (1920) University: PhD Chemistry and Physics, University of California at Berkeley (1922) Teacher: Chemistry, University of California at Berkeley (1922-34) Professor: Chemistry, University of California at Berkeley (1934-82)
Occidental Petroleum Hooker Electro-Chemical Company, 1914-16
Chandler Medal 1936
Elliott Cresson Medal 1937
Nobel Prize for Chemistry 1949 Willard Gibbs Medal 1951
Gilbert Newton Lewis Medal 1956
American Academy of Arts and Sciences American Chemical Society American Philosophical Society 1940 American Physical Society American Chemical Society American Physical Society American Academy of Arts and Sciences National Academy of Sciences 1936 American Ancestry Paternal
Canadian Ancestry Maternal
Risk Factors: Arthritis
Author of books:
Low Temperature, Chemical, and Magneto Thermodynamics (1969, collected papers)
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