Walter H. Stockmayer

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Walter Hugo Stockmayer (7 April 1914, Rutherford, New Jersey - 9 May 2004, Norwich, Vermont) was an internationally known chemist and university teacher. He is widely recognized as one of the twentieth century pioneers of polymer science. His specific interest was in theory and experiment for the structure and dynamics of polymer molecules, including various uses of the light scattering method.

Stockmayer became interested in the mathematical aspects of physical chemistry as an undergraduate at MIT. A Rhodes Scholarship brought him to Jesus College, Oxford, where he undertook gas kinetics research with D. L. Chapman. Stockmayer returned to MIT for Ph.D. research and pursued his study of statistical mechanics, which he later continued at Columbia University. He returned again to MIT in 1943 to study the theory of network formation and the gelation criterion. Stockmayer increasingly directed his attention to theories of polymer solutions, light scattering and chain dynamics.

After a Guggenheim Fellowship in Strasbourg, France, he returned once more to MIT, then moved to Dartmouth College in 1961. There, he worked primarily on copolymers in dilute solution, established the journal Macromolecules, and collaborated with many Japanese scientists.

[edit] Trivia

Walter H.Stockmayer is mentioned as the friend of the author in the novel Breakfast of Champions by Kurt Vonnegut. According to Vonnegut, Stockmayer was a distinguished pianist and a good skier.

[edit] External links

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