- Thomas Kilgore Sherwood
Thomas Kilgore Sherwood (
July 25 ,1903 –January 14 ,1976 ) was a noted American chemical engineer and a founding member of theNational Academy of Engineering .Sherwood was born in
Columbus, Ohio , and spent much of his youth inMontreal . In 1923 he received his B.S. fromMcGill University , and entered theMassachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) for his Ph.D. His dissertation, "The Mechanism of the Drying of Solids," was completed in 1929, a year after he had become assistant professor atWorcester Polytechnic Institute . In 1930 he returned to MIT as assistant professor where he remained until his retirement, serving as associate professor (1933), professor (1941), and dean of engineering (1946-1952). In 1969 he retired from MIT to became professor of chemical engineering at theUniversity of California, Berkeley .Sherwood's primary research area was
mass transfer , and in 1937 he published the first major textbook in the field, "Absorption and Extraction" (republished 1974 as "Mass Transfer"). TheSherwood number is named in his honor:where
* = overall mass transfer coefficient;
* = characteristic length;
* = component diffusion coefficientHis activities in
World War II included organizing chemical engineers for theNational Defense Research Committee (NDRC) in 1940; consulting to theBaruch Committee on synthetic rubber development (1942); serving as NDRC Section Chief for Miscellaneous Chemical Engineering Problems (1942), where he oversaw creation of newhydraulic fluid s, antifouling coatings for ship bottoms, largesmoke screen generators, etc.; and member of the Whitman Committee onjet propulsion (1944). In autumn 1944 he followed American troops into Europe to gather scientific intelligence. His industrial consulting work included efforts in seawaterdesalination , removal ofsulfur dioxide from emissions, freeze-dryingblood , and the manufacture ofpenicillin andvinyl acetate .Sherwood received the U.S.
Medal for Merit (1948), won major awards from theAmerican Institute of Chemical Engineers andAmerican Chemical Society , and was a member of theAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences (1948), National Academy of Sciences (1958), andNational Academy of Engineering .References
* [http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=578&page=247 National Academy of Engineering memorial tribute]
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