- Vladimir Ipatieff
Infobox_Scientist
name =Vladimir Nikolayevich Ipatieff
caption =
birth_date = birth date|1867|11|21|mf=y!
birth_place =Moscow
residence =
nationality =flag|Russia|name=Russian flag|USA|name=American
death_date = death date and age|1952|11|29|1867|11|21
death_place =Chicago
field =
alma_mater =
work_institution =Northwestern University
doctoral_advisor =Alexei Yevgrafovich Favorskii
academic_advisors =
doctoral_students =
known_for =
prizes =
religion =
footnotes =Vladimir Nikolayevich Ipatieff (also Ipatiev, _ru. Владимир Николаевич Ипатьев) (
November 21 ,1867 (November 9 OS) -November 29 ,1952 ) was a Russian and Americanchemist . His most important contributions are in the field ofpetroleum chemistry.Born in
Moscow , Ipatieff first studiedartillery in theMikhailovskaya artillery academy in Petersburg, then later studiedchemistry in Russia withAlexei Yevgrafovich Favorskii and in Germany. His first works in chemistry were devoted to the study ofmetal s andexplosive s. Later, his works oncatalysis methods under high pressure made him famous as a chemist; for his reactions he used massive "bombs" (often called "Ipatieff bomb") made of steel. With the start ofWorld War I , Ipatieff organized a dedicated laboratory in Petersburg which made improvements to the chemical weaponry and the methods of chemical protection for the army. Before theOctober revolution , Ipatieff was a General-Lieutenant of the Russian army and a member of theRussian Academy of Sciences .After the revolution, Ipatieff was active in creating and heading several important chemical research centers in Soviet Russia.
Lenin called him "the head of our [Soviet] chemical industry". By late 1920s, however, Ipatieff was starting to feel threatened because of his past in the Czarist army and because he had friends among those convicted in theIndustrial Party trial . In 1930, Ipatieff went to Munich to visit his German colleagues, but instead of returning to the USSR he fled to the United States.In the US, Ipatieff was a professor at
Northwestern University , in theChicago suburb of Evanston, and worked for "Universal Oil Products Company ". He and his students made significant contributions toorganic synthesis and petroleum refining. He is considered one of the founding fathers of the modern petroleum chemistry in the US. Ipatieff died in Chicago.Vladimir Ipatieff had three sons: Dmitry, Nikolai and Vladimir. Dmitry died in
World War I . Nikolai was a member of theWhite movement , emigrated after the end ofRussian Civil War and died inAfrica testing a treatment he had invented foryellow fever . Vladimir Vladimirovich Ipatieff, also a talented chemist, remained in the USSR and was arrested after the defection of his father. While living in the USA, Ipatieffs also adopted two Russian girls.External links
* [http://www.library.northwestern.edu/archives/findingaids/ipatieff.pdf, Vladimir N. Ipatieff Papers, Northwestern University Archives, Evanston, Illinois]
* [http://www-hoover.stanford.edu/hila/ruscollection/ipat_br.htm Ipatieff in Russian archives of Hoover Institute]
* [http://www.peoples.ru/science/chemistry/ipatiev/ Biography of Ipatieff]
* [http://www.vgd.ru/I/ippolitv.htm Genealogy of Ipatief family]
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