Armand Michel A. de Waele (17 November 1887 – December 1966) was a British chemist, noted for his contributions to rheology, and after whom the Ostwald-de Waele relationship for non-Newtonian fluids is named.[1]
De Waele was born in Islington, London, in 1887, the son of a Belgian father and French mother. He held dual nationality until the age of 21, when he chose to be a British rather than Belgian. He obtained a BSc from the Regent Street Polytechnic then worked in the paint and linoleum industries. In 1914, the same year was conscripted into the Royal Flying Corps.[2] That same year, he married a Frenchwoman, Jeanne Thérèse Duvivier (1892–1971), in Staines. They had two sons, John and Peter
After the First World War, he joined Gestetner as Chief Research Chemist, where he remained till 1957 when he retired. During this period he published 30 papers on rheology and patents on duplicating as well as a book.[2] He was a Fellow of the Royal Institute of Chemistry and of the Institute of Physics.[3]
He died in Enfield in December 1966.