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Paul Flory

 

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Paul Flory



 
 
Paul John Flory (June 19 1910 – September 9 1985) was an American chemist who was known for his prodigious volume of work in the field of polymers, or macromolecules. He was a leading pioneer in understanding the behavior of polymer
Polymer

A polymer is a large molecule composed of repeating structural units typically connected by covalent chemical bonds. While polymer in popular usage suggests plastic, the term actually refers to a large class of natural and synthetic materials with a variety of properties....
s in solution.

r graduating from Elgin High School in Elgin, Illinois
Elgin, Illinois

Elgin is a city northwest of Chicago on the Fox River . Most of Elgin lies within Kane County, Illinois, with a portion in Cook County, Illinois....
 in 1927, Flory received a bachelor's degree from Manchester College
Manchester College

Manchester College is a liberal arts and sciences college located in North Manchester, Indiana. It has an enrollment of approximately 1,100 students....
 in 1931 and a Ph.D.






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Paul John Flory (June 19 1910 – September 9 1985) was an American chemist who was known for his prodigious volume of work in the field of polymers, or macromolecules. He was a leading pioneer in understanding the behavior of polymer
Polymer

A polymer is a large molecule composed of repeating structural units typically connected by covalent chemical bonds. While polymer in popular usage suggests plastic, the term actually refers to a large class of natural and synthetic materials with a variety of properties....
s in solution.

Biography


Early life

After graduating from Elgin High School in Elgin, Illinois
Elgin, Illinois

Elgin is a city northwest of Chicago on the Fox River . Most of Elgin lies within Kane County, Illinois, with a portion in Cook County, Illinois....
 in 1927, Flory received a bachelor's degree from Manchester College
Manchester College

Manchester College is a liberal arts and sciences college located in North Manchester, Indiana. It has an enrollment of approximately 1,100 students....
 in 1931 and a Ph.D. from the Ohio State University
Ohio State University

The Ohio State University is a public university research university in the state of Ohio. It was founded in 1870 as a land-grant university and is currently the List of largest United States universities by enrollment in the United States....
 in 1934. His first position was at DuPont
DuPont

E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company is an United States chemical industry that was founded in July 1802 as a gunpowder mill by Eleuth?re Ir?n?e du Pont....
 with Wallace Carothers
Wallace Carothers

Wallace Hume Carothers was an United States chemist, inventor and the leader of organic chemistry at DuPont, credited with the invention of Nylon....
.

Polymer science

Flory's earliest work in polymer science was in the area of polymerization
Polymerization

In polymer chemistry, polymerization is a process of reacting monomer molecules together in a chemical reaction to form three-dimensional networks or polymer chains....
 kinetics
Kinetics

Kinetics, derived from the Greek language word ????s?? meaning movement or the act of moving, may refer to:...
 at the DuPont Experimental station. In condensation polymerization, he challenged the assumption that the reactivity of the end group decreased as the macromolecule grew, and by arguing that the reactivity was independent of the size, he was able to derive the result that the number of chains present decreased with size exponentially. In addition polymerization
Addition polymerization

Addition polymerisation, also called polyaddition or chain growth polymerisation, is a polymerisation technique where Unsaturated compound monomer molecules add on to a growing polymer chain one at a time ....
 he introduced the important concept of chain transfer
Chain transfer

Chain transfer is a polymerization reaction by which the activity of a growing polymer chain is transferred to another molecule. P. + XR' ------> PX + R'....
 to improve the kinetic equations and remove some difficulties in understanding the polymer size distribution.

In 1938, after Carothers' death, he moved to the Basic Science Research Laboratory at the University of Cincinnati
University of Cincinnati

The University of Cincinnati is a coeducational public university research university in Cincinnati, Ohio, Ohio, part of the University System of Ohio....
. Here he developed a mathematical theory for the polymerization of compounds with more than two functional groups and the theory of polymer networks or gels.

In 1940 he joined the Linden, NJ laboratory of the Standard Oil
Standard Oil

Standard Oil was a predominant United States integrated petroleum producing, transporting, refining, and marketing company. Established in 1870 as an Ohio Corporation, it was the largest oil refiner in the world and operated as a major company trust and was one of the world's first and largest multinational corporations until it was broken up...
 Development Company where he developed a statistical mechanical theory for polymer mixtures. In 1943 he left to join the research laboratories of Goodyear
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company

The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company was founded in 1898 by Frank Seiberling. Today it is the third largest tire company in the world after Bridgestone and Michelin....
 as head of a group on polymer fundamentals. In the Spring of 1948 Peter Debye
Peter Debye

Peter Joseph William Debye was a Netherlands physics and physical chemistry, and Nobel laureate....
, then chairman of the chemistry department at Cornell University
Cornell University

Cornell University located in Ithaca, New York, USA, is a private university with four Statutory college. Its two medical campuses are in New York City and Education City, Qatar....
, invited Flory to give the annual Baker Lectures. He then was offered a position with the faculty in the Fall of the same year. Here he elaborated and refined his Baker Lectures into his magnum opus, Principles of Polymer Chemistry which was published in 1953 by Cornell University Press. This quickly became a standard text for all workers in the field of polymers, and is still widely used to this day.

Flory introduced the concept of excluded volume
Excluded volume

The concept of excluded volume was introduced by Werner Kuhn in 1934 and applied to polymer molecules shortly thereafter by Paul Flory....
, coined by Werner Kuhn
Werner Kuhn

Werner Kuhn is a Swiss physical chemist who developed the first model of the viscosity of polymer solutions using statistical mechanics. He is known for being the first to apply Boltzmann's entropy formula:...
 in 1934, to polymers. Excluded volume refers to the idea that one part of a long chain molecule can not occupy space that is already occupied by another part of the same molecule. Excluded volume causes the ends of a polymer chain in a solution to be further apart (on average) than they would be were there no excluded volume. The recognition that excluded volume was an important factor in analyzing long-chain molecules in solutions provided an important conceptual breakthrough, and led to the explanation of several puzzling experimental results of the day. It also led to the concept of the theta point
Theta solvent

In a polymer solution, a theta solvent is a solvent in which polymer coils act like ideal chains, assuming exactly their random walk coil dimensions....
, the set of conditions at which an experiment can be conducted that causes the excluded volume effect to be neutralized. At the theta point, the chain reverts to ideal chain characteristics - the long-range interactions arising from excluded volume are eliminated, allowing the experimenter to more easily measure short-range features such as structural geometry, bond rotation potentials, and steric interactions between near-neighboring groups. Flory correctly identified that the chain dimension in polymer melts would have the size computed for a chain in ideal solution if excluded volume interactions were neutralized by experimenting at the theta point.

Among his accomplishments are an original method for computing the probable size of a polymer in good solution, the Flory-Huggins Solution Theory
Flory-Huggins solution theory

Flory-Huggins solution theory is a mathematical model of the thermodynamics of polymer solutions which takes account of the great dissimilarity in molecule sizes in adapting the usual expression for the entropy of mixing....
, and the derivation of the Flory exponent, which helps characterize the movement of polymers in solution.

The Flory convention

see Flory convention
Flory convention

The Flory convention for defining the variables involved on modeling the position vectors of atoms in macromolecules it is often necessary to convert from Cartesian coordinates to generalized coordinates....
 for details.
In modeling the position vectors of atoms in macromolecules it is often necessary to convert from Cartesian coordinates (x,y,z) to generalized coordinates
Generalized coordinates

By deriving equations of motion in terms of a general set of generalized coordinates, the results found will be valid for any coordinate system that is ultimately specified." The name is a holdover from a period when Cartesian coordinates were the standard system....
. The Flory convention for defining the variables involved is usually employed. For an example, a peptide bond can be described by the x,y,z positions of every atom in this bond or the Flory convention can be used. Here one must know the bond length
Bond length

In molecular geometry, bond length or bond distance is the average distance between nuclei of two chemical bond atoms in a molecule....
s , bond angles , and the dihedral angle
Dihedral angle

In geometry, the angle between two Plane s is called their dihedral or torsion angle.The dihedral angle of two planes can be seen by looking at the planes "edge on", i.e., along their line of intersection....
s . Applying a vector conversion from the Cartesian coordinates to the generalized coordinates will describe the same three-dimensional structure using the Flory convention.

Later years

He accepted a professorship at Stanford University in 1961, became the Jackson-Wood Professor there in 1966 and retired from there in 1975. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Nobel Prize in Chemistry

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry is awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences to scientists in the various fields of chemistry. It is one of the five Nobel Prizes established by the will of Alfred Nobel in 1895, awarded for outstanding contributions in chemistry, Nobel Prize in Physics, Nobel Prize in Literature, Nobel Peace Pri...
 in 1974 "for his fundamental achievements, both theoretical and experimental, in the physical chemistry of macromolecules." He remained active after his retirement, and consulted for IBM
IBM

International Business Machines Corporation, abbreviated IBM and nicknamed "Big Blue" , is a multinational corporation computer technology and consulting corporation headquartered in Armonk, New York, New York, United States....
 for some years. He and his wife Emily Catherine Tabor (now deceased) had three children. He died of a heart attack in Big Sur, California in 1985.

Bibliography

  • Flory, Paul. (1953) Principles of Polymer Chemistry. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-0134-8.
  • Flory, Paul. (1969) Statistical Mechanics of Chain Molecules. Interscience. ISBN 0-470-26495-0. Reissued 1989. ISBN 1-56990-019-1.
  • Flory, Paul. (1985) Selected Works of Paul J. Flory. Stanford Univ Press. ISBN 0-8047-1277-8.


External links