William Merriam Burton Explained

William Merriam Burton
Birth Date:November 17, 1865
Birth Place:Cleveland, Ohio
Death Place:Miami, Florida
Field:Chemistry
Work Institution:Standard Oil
Prizes:Willard Gibbs Award (1918)
Perkin Medal (1922)

William Merriam Burton (November 17, 1865  - December 29, 1954) was an American chemist who developed a widely used thermal cracking process for crude oil.[1]

Burton was born in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1886, he received a Bachelor of Science degree at Western Reserve University. He earned a PhD at Johns Hopkins University in 1889.

Burton initially worked for the Standard Oil refinery at Whiting, Indiana. He became president of Standard Oil from 1918 to 1927, when he retired.

The process of thermal cracking invented by Burton, which became on January 7, 1913, doubled the yield of gasoline that can be extracted from crude oil.

The first thermal cracking method, the Shukhov cracking process, was invented by Russian engineer Vladimir Shukhov (1853-1939), in the Russian empire, Patent No. 12926, November 27, 1891.

Burton died in Miami, Florida.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: William Meriam Burton. jhu.edu. 17 March 2013.