- Arthur C. Cope
Infobox_Scientist
name = Arthur Clay Cope
image_width =
caption =
birth_date = birth date|1909|6|27
birth_place =Dunreith, Indiana ,United States
death_date = death date and age|1966|6|4|1909|6|27
death_place =Washington, D.C. ,United States
residence =
citizenship =
nationality = American
ethnicity =
field =Organic chemistry
work_institution =Columbia University ,Massachusetts Institute of Technology
alma_mater =Butler University inIndianapolis BSUniversity of Wisconsin Ph.D.
doctoral_advisor =Samuel M. McElvain
doctoral_students =
known_for =Cope elimination ,Cope rearrangement
author_abbreviation_bot =
author_abbreviation_zoo =
prizes = Member of the National Academy of Sciences
religion =
footnotes =Arthur C. Cope (1909-1966) was a highly successful and influential
organic chemist and member of the National Academy of Sciences. He is credited with the development of several important chemical reactions which bear his name including theCope elimination and theCope rearrangement .Cope was born on June 27, 1909 in
Dunreith, Indiana . He received a bachelor's degree in chemistry fromButler University inIndianapolis in 1929 and a PhD in 1932 from theUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison . His research continued at Harvard University in 1933 as a National Research Council Fellow. In 1934, he joined the faculty ofBryn Mawr College . There his research included the first syntheses of a number ofbarbiturate s includingdelvinyl sodium . At Bryn Mawr, Cope also developed a reaction involving the thermal rearrangement of anallyl group which eventually became known as the Cope rearrangement.In 1941, Cope moved to
Columbia University where he worked on projects associated with the war effect including chemical warfare agents, antimalarial drugs, and treatments formustard gas poisoning. In 1945, he moved to theMassachusetts Institute of Technology to become the head of the Department of Chemistry. In 1947, he was elected to the National Academy of Sciences.Today, the
Arthur C. Cope Award , in honor of his memory, is given out annually by theAmerican Chemical Society to the most outstanding organic chemist.References
*cite journal | title = Arthur Clay Cope | author=John D. Roberts and John C. Sheehan | journal = Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences | year = 1991 | volume = 60 | pages = 17–27|url =http://books.nap.edu/html/biomems/acope.pdf
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.