Hans Tropper (1905–1978) was an Austrian Professor of Electrical Engineering with research interest in breakdown strength of liquid insulation. The ‘Hans Tropper Memorial Lecture’ is held in his honour to open each IEEE International Conference on Dielectric Liquids. He also briefly worked for Elin Aktiengesellschaft fur Elektrische Industrie.
Hans Tropper was born in 1905, in Vienna, Austria. He was an only child born to parents Johann and Josefa. As well as having no siblings, he also had no aunts or uncles. Tropper was brought up by his mother for most of his teenage years after his father was killed during WWI while serving as an officer in the Austrian Army.[1]
Tropper married A. Mary Barnett, also a doctor (in mathematics), in 1947, becoming a British citizen in the same year. They had two daughters together, including physicist Anne Tropper.[2]
Tropper received his PhD in 1939. In 1956, Hans Tropper was appointed as a senior lecturer at Queen Mary College London, reading electrical engineering.[3] His personal research interest was in the dielectric breakdown strength of insulating liquids. In 1969 he was made professor of electrical engineering at the same college.[4] During this time, he oversaw 56 doctorate theses and 7 masters’ dissertation students as either supervisor or advisor, including students at Queen Mary College London as well as many international candidates.[5] Notable students include Brendan Scaife.
Tropper was responsible for the running of the high voltage at Queen Mary College, the first at a UK University.[6] [7]
Tropper published Electric Circuit Theory - An Introduction to Steady State and Transient Theory Based on the Superposition Principle in 1949.[8]
Hans Tropper contributed substantially to the field of dielectric materials. In recognition of this, a memorial lecture was held in the second International Conference on Dielectric Liquids (ICDL) after his death (the eighth sequential conference), at Pavia, Italy. The ICDL conference is an international conference that focuses on results and practical experience of properties, dielectric phenomena and applications of insulating liquids, bringing together an international audience to share knowledge around this field.[9]
The paper associated to the memorial lecture is typically published as part of the conference proceedings. A full history of Hans Tropper Memorial Lectures is given below.
Year (Conference Edition) | Location | Presenter | Title | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1984 (8) | Pavia, Italy | T.J. Lewis | Electronic Processes in Dielectric Liquids Under Incipient Breakdown Stress[10] * | |
1987 (9) | Salford, UK | N.J. Félici | Blazing a Fiery Trail with the Hounds[11] | |
1990 (10) | Grenoble, France | Unknown | Unknown | |
1993 (11) | Baden-Dättwil, Switzerland | P. Atten | Electrohydrodynamic Instability and Motion Induces by Space Charge in Insulating Liquids[12] | |
1996 (12) | Roma, Italy | K. Yoshino | Electronic Processes in Liquids of Aromatic and Conjugated Structure[13] | |
1999 (13) | Nara, Japan | Unknown | Unknown | |
2002 (14) | Graz, Austria | J.K. Nelson | Motion at the Liquid-solid Interface - Developing Design Tools from Fundamental Models[14] | |
2005 (15) | Coimbra, Portugal | C.W. Fabjan | Fundamental Physics with Noble Liquid Detectors[15] | |
2008 (16) | Poitiers, France | M. Pompili | Partial Discharge Measurements in Dielectric Liquids[16] | |
2011 (17) | Trondheim, Norway | A. Denat | Conduction and Breakdown in Dielectric Liquids[17] | |
2014 (18) | Bled, Slovenia | E. Gockenbach | Liquids in High Voltage Equipment[18] | |
2017 (19) | Manchester, UK | H. Okubo | Kerr Electro-optic Electric Field Measurement and Electrical Insulation Performance in HVDC Liquid Dielectric Systems[19] | |
2019 (20) | Rome, Italy | J. Yagoobi | Transport of Heat and Mass with Electrical Field – from Earth to Space[20] |
∗Not published as part of conference proceedings, instead published in IEEE Transactions on Electrical Insulation Vol. EI-20 No.2, April 1985