Evert Verwey
Evert Johannes Willem Verwey, also Verweij, (April 30, 1905, Amsterdam – February 13, 1981, Utrecht) was a Dutch chemist, who also did research in physical chemistry.
Verwey studied chemistry at the University of Amsterdam and obtained his MSc (Dutch: Doctoraal Examen) in 1929. From 1931 he worked as an assistant at the University of Groningen, where he obtained his PhD under the guidance of Hugo Rudolph Kruyt (1934, cum laude). In 1934 he moved to the Philips Laboratories in Eindhoven. He continued work on colloids, which was also the topic of his dissertation, and on oxides. The Verwey transition in magnetite is named after him.
Some of his studies[1] on transition metal oxides (carried out jointly with de Boer) showed that some transition-metal oxides had electrical properties that could not be explained on the basis of band theory.[2]
Between 1946 and 1967, together with physicist Hendrik Casimir and the engineer Herre Rinia, he was director of the Laboratories.
He is known for DLVO theory, a theory of the interaction of charged surfaces in fluids, which has applications, for example, in the description of colloids.
In 1949 he became a member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 1967 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by the Delft University of Technology. He was also a curator at the University of Utrecht.
He was married to the sociologist and politician Hilda Verwey-Jonker (1908–2004).
References
- ↑ de Boer, J. H.; Verwey, E. J. W. (1937). "Semi-conductors with partially and with completely filled 3d-lattice bands". Proceedings of the Physical Society 49 (4S): 59. doi:10.1088/0959-5309/49/4S/307.
- ↑ Imada, Masatoshi; Fujimori, Atsushi; Tokura, Yoshinori (1998). "Metal-Insulator Transitions". Reviews of Modern Physics 70 (4): 1039–1263.
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