Victor K. LaMer | |
Birth Date: | June 15, 1895 |
Birth Place: | Leavenworth, Kansas |
Death Place: | Nottingham, England |
Nationality: | American |
Fields: | Chemistry |
Alma Mater: | Columbia University |
Thesis Title: | The Effect of Temperature and Hydrogen Ion Concentration upon the Rate of Destruction of the Antiscorbutic Vitamin |
Thesis Url: | https://clio.columbia.edu/catalog/1933002 |
Thesis Year: | 1921 |
Doctoral Advisor: | Henry Clapp Sherman |
Victor Kuhn LaMer or La Mer (1895 - 1966) was an American chemist.[1] He has been described as "the father of colloid chemistry".[2]
LaMer was born in Leavenworth, Kansas on June 15, 1895. He was the son of Joseph Secondule LaMer and AnnaPauline Kuhn.[3]
He obtained his AB degree from the University of Kansas in 1915. Over the next two years, he did a number of jobs, which include a high school teacher, a student at the University of Chicago, and a research chemist at the Carnegie Institution of Washington. In 1917 he joined the Sanitary Corps of the U.S. Army and was commissioned as a 1st Lieutenant.
In 1921, he obtained his PhD from Columbia University. His doctoral thesis was The effect of temperature and hydrogen ion concentration upon the rate of destruction of the antiscorbutic vitamin.[4] The thesis was summarized in 1921 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,[5] and more thoroughly in 1922 in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.[6]
LaMer joined Columbia University as an instructor in physical chemistry in 1920, became a full professor in 1935, and remained there until his retirement in 1961, continuing his scientific work with the status of emeritus professor, and was a senior researcher in mineral technology at Columbia School of Mines.[7] In 1931, LaMer took a sabbatical and went to Stanford University, to be a visiting professor during the spring quarter directing courses in physical chemistry and catalysis.[8] [9]
During World War II, he was a member of the National Defense Research Council, and afterwards, was a consultant to the Atomic Energy Commission.[7] During the war, he invented an aerosol-generator fog spray machine for the Army and Navy that killed malaria bearing mosquitoes with DDT within a half mile radius.[7]
In 1950, he was appointed by New York City Mayor O'Dwyer to be chairman of the mayor's advisory committee on scientific rainmaking.[7] The committee conferred with the mayor and water commissioner Stephen Carney, to give advice on rain making experiments, and to analyze and interpret reports and plans for artificially induced precipitation, due to an anticipation of lower water storage in the reservoirs.[10]
In 1953, he traveled to Copenhagen, Denmark, where he was a Fulbright professor at the University of Copenhagen.[7] In June 1959, he went to Australia on a Fulbright lectureship, where he was lecturing in Physical Chemistry at the CSIRO Chemical Research Laboratories in Melbourne. He was invited by the CSIRO to take part in a study program on the retardation of evaporation in reservoirs.[11]
He was the editor of Journal of Colloid Science (now Journal of Colloid and Interface Science) from its foundation in 1946 until 1965.[12]
He was elected a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 1931[13] and a Member of the National Academy of Sciences in 1948.
He was also a member of American Chemical Society, and an elected member of the Royal Academy of Science, Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium and the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters He was a fellow of the New York Academy of Sciences and its president in 1949.
He received an honorary degree from Clarkson University in 1962. LaMer was also a honorary professor at National University of San Marcos in Lima, Peru.[7]
The Victor K. LaMer chair of colloid and surface science at Clarkson University is named in his memory.[14] [15] The Division of Colloid and Surface Chemistry of the American Chemical Society offers an annual Victor K. LaMer Award for Graduate Research in Colloid and Surface Chemistry.[16] LaMer received the ACS Award in Colloid Chemistry in 1956.[17]
He received the President's Certificate of Merit for his contributions to defense for his research on aerosols.[7]
On July 31, 1918, LaMer married Ethel Agatha McGreevy. They had three daughters.
On September 26, 1966 he died suddenly and unexpectedly while in Nottingham, England to present a paper to a meeting of the Faraday Society.