Yahoo France Recherche Web

Résultats de recherche

  1. Frank Henry Westheimer (January 15, 1912 – April 14, 2007) was an American chemist. He taught at the University of Chicago from 1936 to 1954, and at Harvard University from 1953 to 1983, becoming the Morris Loeb Professor of Chemistry in 1960, and Professor Emeritus in 1983. The Westheimer medal was established in his honor in 2002.

  2. 30 mai 2007 · Frank Westheimer, who died on 14 April at the age of 95, demonstrated that chemists have a unique advantage in deciphering the key processes of biology. Westheimer used his insight to describe...

    • John Alan Gerlt
    • 2007
  3. Frank H. Westheimer, a Harvard chemist whose work in understanding how the body metabolizes alcohol became a model for similar studies in the growing field of biochemistry, died last Saturday at...

  4. Frank H. Westheimer, Morris Loeb Professor of Chemistry Emeritus, at Harvard University and one of the key figures in 20th century chemistry, died at his home in Cambridge, Mass., on April 14. He was 95.

  5. 5 sept. 2018 · Frank H. Westheimer integrated physical and organic chemistry to become an important contributor to the field that came to be called ‘physical organic chemistry’. He then went on to apply physical organic chemistry to the study of biological transformations.

    • Steven Benner, Elias J. Corey
    • 2018
  6. Frank Henry Westheimer. In a distinguished career, Westheimer led the way in applying physical organic methods to bioorganic chemical reaction mechanisms. He demonstrated (with B. Vennesland) direct and stereospecific hydrogen transfer in biochemical oxidation-reduction reactions that require the coenzyme nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD

  7. 9 mai 2008 · Frank Westheimer was an influential and versatile chemist whose activities cut through the traditional borders of different branches of chemistry. He did his studies in the 1930s, receiving his Ph.D. at Harvard University in 1935. He started his academic career at the University of Chicago and continued it at Harvard University.

  1. Ready to hang. Inspiration From The Phenomena Of Nature, Whether Human Or The Physical.