Herman Francis Mark: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Austrian-American chemist}} |
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[[File:Herman_Francis_Mark.jpg|thumb|right|Herman Francis Mark]] |
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⚫ | '''Herman Francis Mark''' (born '''Hermann Franz Mark'''; May 3, 1895, [[Vienna]] – April 6, 1992, [[Austin, Texas]]) was an [[Austrian-American]] [[chemist]] regarded for his contributions to the development of [[polymer science]]. Mark's [[X-ray diffraction]] work on the molecular structure of fibers provided important evidence for the [[macromolecule|macromolecular]] theory of polymer structure. Together with [[Roelof Houwink|Houwink]] he formulated an equation, now called the [[Mark–Houwink equation|Mark–Houwink or Mark–Houwink–Sakurada equation]], describing the dependence of the intrinsic [[viscosity]] of a polymer on its relative molecular mass ([[molecular weight]]). He was a long-time faculty at [[Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Herman-Francis-Mark|title = Herman Francis Mark | American chemist| date=30 April 2024 }}</ref> In 1946, he established the ''[[Journal of Polymer Science]]''. |
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==Biography== |
==Biography== |
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===Early life=== |
===Early life=== |
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Mark was born in Vienna in 1895, the son of Hermann Carl Mark, a physician, and Lili Mueller. Mark's father was Jewish, but converted to [[Christianity]] ([[Lutheran Church]]) upon marriage.<ref name="ACS Landmarks">{{cite web |url = http://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/education/whatischemistry/landmarks/polymerresearchinstitute.html |title = Herman Mark and the Polymer Research Institute |publisher = American Chemical Society |work = National Historic Chemical Landmarks |access-date= 2015-12-01}}</ref> |
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Several early stimuli apparently steered Herman Mark to science. He was greatly influenced by a teacher, Franz Hlawaty, who made mathematics and physics understandable. At the age of twelve, he and his friend toured the laboratories of the University of Vienna. His friend's father, who taught science, arranged the tour. The visit excited both boys and before long they turned their bedrooms into laboratories. Both had access to chemicals through their fathers, and they were soon performing experiments.<ref name = "ACS Landmarks" /> |
Several early stimuli apparently steered Herman Mark to science. He was greatly influenced by a teacher, Franz Hlawaty, who made mathematics and physics understandable. At the age of twelve, he and his friend toured the laboratories of the [[University of Vienna]]. His friend's father, who taught science, arranged the tour. The visit excited both boys and before long they turned their bedrooms into laboratories. Both had access to chemicals through their fathers, and they were soon performing experiments.<ref name = "ACS Landmarks" /> |
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===World War I=== |
===World War I=== |
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Mark served as an Officer in the elite k.k. Kaiserschützen Regiment Nr. II of the [[Austro-Hungarian Army]] during [[World War I]]. He was highly decorated and the Austrian hero of the alpine [[Battle of Mount Ortigara]] in June 1917.{{cn|date=April 2023}} |
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He was highly decorated and the Austrian hero of the alpine [[Battle of Mount Ortigara]] in June 1917. |
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===X-ray diffraction=== |
===X-ray diffraction=== |
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Mark worked on [[X-ray diffraction]]. [[Linus Pauling]] learned X-ray diffraction from Mark, and that knowledge led to Pauling's seminal work on the structure of proteins. |
Mark worked on [[X-ray diffraction]] caused by passage through gases along with physicist [[Raimund Wierl]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hargittai |first=Istvan |date=2022 |title=Herman F. Mark – Pioneer of polymer chemistry and initiator of the gas-phase electron diffraction technique of molecular structure determination |journal=Structural Chemistry |language=en |volume=33 |issue=4 |pages=1379–1384 |doi=10.1007/s11224-022-01937-9 |s2cid=248121005 |issn=1040-0400|doi-access=free }}</ref> This led to the computation of intermolecular distances. [[Linus Pauling]] learned X-ray diffraction from Mark, and that knowledge led to Pauling's seminal work on the structure of proteins. |
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[[Albert Einstein]] asked Mark and his colleagues |
[[Albert Einstein]] asked Mark and his colleagues to use the intense and powerful X-ray tubes available at their laboratory to verify the [[Compton Effect]]; this work provided the strongest confirmation yet of Einstein's light quantum theory for which he won the [[Nobel Prize in Physics]].<ref name = "ACS Landmarks" /> |
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===IG Farben=== |
===IG Farben=== |
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In 1926 |
In 1926, chemist Kurt Meyer of [[IG Farben]] offered Mark the assistant directorship of research at one of the company's laboratories. In his years at Farben, Mark worked on the first serious attempts at the commercialization of [[polystyrene]], [[polyvinyl chloride]], [[polyvinyl alcohol]], and the first [[synthetic rubber]]s. Mark helped make Farben a leader in manufacturing and distribution of new polymers and co-polymers. |
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Mark's son [[Hans Mark]] (1929–2021) later became an American government official. |
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⚫ | With the rise of Nazi power, Mark's plant manager recognised that as a foreigner and the son of a Jewish father he would be most vulnerable. Mark took his manager's advice and accepted a position as professor of physical chemistry at the University of Vienna, which brought him back to the city where he grew up. Mark's stay in Vienna lasted six very successful years during which he designed a new curriculum in polymer chemistry and continued research in the field of macromolecules. |
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⚫ | With the rise of Nazi power, Mark's plant manager recognised that as a foreigner and the son of a Jewish father he would be most vulnerable. Mark took his manager's advice and accepted a position as professor of physical chemistry at the University of Vienna, which brought him back to the city where he grew up. Mark's stay in Vienna lasted six very successful years during which he designed a new curriculum in polymer chemistry and continued research in the field of [[Macromolecule|macromolecules]]. |
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⚫ | In September 1937, Mark met C.B. Thorne, an official with the |
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⚫ | In September 1937, Mark met C.B. Thorne, an official with the Canadian International Pulp and Paper Company, in [[Dresden]]. At the meeting, Thorne offered Mark a position as research manager with the company in [[Hawkesbury, Ontario]], Canada, with the goal of modernizing its production of wood pulp for the purpose of making [[rayon]], [[cellulose acetate]], and [[cellophane]]. Mark replied that he was busy but that he would try to visit Canada the following year to help reorganize the company's research facilities. |
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===Escape from Nazi Europe=== |
===Escape from Nazi Europe=== |
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When Hitler's troops invaded Austria and declared the [[Anschluss]] (the political union of Germany and Austria), Mark was arrested and thrown into a Gestapo prison. He was released with a warning not to contact anyone Jewish. He was also stripped of his passport. He retrieved his passport by paying a bribe equal to a year's salary, and he obtained a visa to enter Canada and transit visas through Switzerland, France, and England. At the end of April, Mark and his family mounted a Nazi flag on the radiator of their car, strapped ski equipment on the roof, and drove across the border, reaching Zurich the next day. From there, the family traveled to England via France, and in September, Mark, temporarily leaving his family behind, boarded a boat to Montreal.<ref name= "ACS Landmarks" /> |
When Hitler's troops invaded Austria and declared the [[Anschluss]] (the political union of Germany and Austria), Mark was arrested and thrown into a Gestapo prison. He was released with a warning not to contact anyone Jewish. He was also stripped of his passport. He retrieved his passport by paying a bribe equal to a year's salary, and he obtained a visa to enter Canada and transit visas through Switzerland, France, and England. At the end of April, Mark and his family mounted a Nazi flag on the radiator of their car, strapped ski equipment on the roof, and drove across the border, reaching Zurich the next day. From there, the family traveled to England via France, and in September, Mark, temporarily leaving his family behind, boarded a boat to Montreal.<ref name= "ACS Landmarks" /> |
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===United States=== |
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From Canada, Mark went to the United States, where he joined the [[Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn]]. There he established a strong polymer program which included not only research but the first undergraduate polymer education in the United States.<ref> |
From Canada, Mark went to the United States, where he joined the [[Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn]]. There he established a strong polymer program which included not only research but the first undergraduate polymer education in the United States.<ref name="OH">{{cite web|author=Center for Oral History| title= Herman Mark |url=https://oh.sciencehistory.org/oral-histories/mark-herman|website= [[Science History Institute]] }}</ref><ref name="transcript">{{cite book|first1=James J. |last1= Bohning|first2= Jeffrey L. |last2=Sturchio |title=Herman Mark, Transcript of Interviews Conducted by James J. Bohning and Jeffrey L. Sturchio at Polytechnic University, Brooklyn, New York on 3 February, 17 March, and 20 June 1986 |date=20 June 1986 |url=https://oh.sciencehistory.org/sites/default/files/mark_h_0030_suppl.pdf|place=Philadelphia, PA|publisher=[[Science History Institute|The Beckman Center for the History of Chemistry]] }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |
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{{cite web |
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|title=Herman Francis Mark |
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}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://www.qcc.cuny.edu/NYACSReport2003/HistPolymer.htm |
|url=http://www.qcc.cuny.edu/NYACSReport2003/HistPolymer.htm |
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|title=Herman Mark and the Polymer Research Institute |
|title=Herman Mark and the Polymer Research Institute |
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Some of Mark's earliest work at the Brooklyn Polytechnic involved experiments with reinforcing ice by mixing water with [[wood pulp]] or [[cotton wool]] before freezing. In 1942, the results of these experiments were later passed to [[Max Perutz]] who had been a student of Mark in Vienna, but was now in the UK. [[Max Perutz]]'s work would lead to the development of [[Pykrete]].<ref>Perutz, 2002, |
Some of Mark's earliest work at the Brooklyn Polytechnic involved experiments with reinforcing ice by mixing water with [[wood pulp]] or [[cotton wool]] before freezing. In 1942, the results of these experiments were later passed to [[Max Perutz]] who had been a student of Mark in Vienna, but was now in the UK. [[Max Perutz]]'s work would lead to the development of [[Pykrete]].<ref>Perutz, 2002, p. 83</ref> |
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⚫ | In 1946, Mark established the Polymer Research Institute at [[Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn]], the first research facility in the United States dedicated to polymer research. Mark is also recognized as a pioneer in establishing curriculum and pedagogy for the field of polymer science.<ref name= "ACS Landmarks" /> In 1950, the POLY division of the [[American Chemical Society]] was formed, and has since grown to the second-largest division in this association with nearly 8,000 members. |
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⚫ | In 1946, Mark established the Polymer Research Institute at [[Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn]], the first research facility in the United States dedicated to polymer research. Mark is also recognized as a pioneer in establishing curriculum and pedagogy for the field of polymer science.<ref name= "ACS Landmarks" /> In 1950, the POLY division of the [[American Chemical Society]] was formed, and has since grown to the second-largest division in this association with nearly 8,000 members.{{cn|date=April 2023}} |
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Herman Mark had two sons, Hans Mark, formerly chancellor of the University of Texas, and Peter Mark, Professor of Electrical engineering at Princeton University until his death in 1979. Herman Mark is survived by his granddaughter Catherine Burdge, and his great-grandchildren Lucy and Peter Burdge. |
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In 2003, the [[American Chemical Society]] designated the Polymer Research Institute as a [[National Historic Chemical Landmarks|National Historic Chemical Landmark]].<ref name= "ACS Landmarks" /> |
In 2003, the [[American Chemical Society]] designated the Polymer Research Institute as a [[National Historic Chemical Landmarks|National Historic Chemical Landmark]].<ref name= "ACS Landmarks" /> |
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==Decorations and awards== |
==Decorations and awards== |
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* 1960: [[William H. Nichols Medal]] |
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* 1965: [[Austrian Decoration for Science and Art]] |
* 1965: [[Austrian Decoration for Science and Art]] |
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* 1966: Foreign |
* 1966: Foreign member of the [[Soviet Academy of Sciences]] |
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* 1966: [[Elliott Cresson Medal]] |
* 1966: [[Elliott Cresson Medal]] |
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* 1972: [[Chemical Pioneer Award]] |
* 1972: [[Chemical Pioneer Award]] |
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* 1979: [[National Medal of Science]] (United States) |
* 1979: [[National Medal of Science]] (United States) |
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* 1979: [[Wolf Prize]] in Chemistry |
* 1979: [[Wolf Prize]] in Chemistry |
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* 1980: [[Colwyn medal]]<ref>{{cite web|title=Colwyn Medal award winners|url=http://iom3archive.org.uk/awards/pastwinners.htm|website=iom3|access-date=25 September 2017}}{{Dead link|date=August 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> |
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* 1980: [[Perkin Medal]] |
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* 1980: [[Perkin Medal]]<ref name="SCI Perkin Medal">{{cite web|title=SCI Perkin Medal|url=https://www.sciencehistory.org/sci-perkin-medal|website=[[Science History Institute]]|date=31 May 2016|access-date=24 March 2018}}</ref> |
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* 1988: [[Charles Goodyear Medal]] |
* 1988: [[Charles Goodyear Medal]] |
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| last = Perutz |
| last = Perutz |
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| first = Max |
| first = Max |
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| author-link = Max Perutz |
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| title = I Wish I Made You Angry Earlier |
| title = I Wish I Made You Angry Earlier |
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| publisher = Oxford University Press |
| publisher = Oxford University Press |
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| location = |
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| series = |
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| year = 2002|edition=paperback| isbn = 0-19-859027-X }} |
| year = 2002|edition=paperback| isbn = 0-19-859027-X }} |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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* {{cite book|last1=Morawetz|first1=Herbert|title=Herman Francis Mark, 1895—1992 A Biographical Memoir|date=1995|publisher=National Academy of Sciences|location=Washington, DC|url=http://www.nasonline.org/publications/biographical-memoirs/memoir-pdfs/mark-h-f.pdf}} |
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* [http://books.nap.edu/html/biomems/hmark.html A short biography] |
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* {{cite web|author=Center for Oral History| title= Herman Mark |url=https://oh.sciencehistory.org/oral-histories/mark-herman|website= [[Science History Institute]] }} |
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*[http://www.nasonline.org/publications/biographical-memoirs/memoir-pdfs/mark-h-f.pdf National Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoir] |
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* {{cite book|first1=James J. |last1= Bohning|first2= Jeffrey L. |last2=Sturchio |title=Herman Mark, Transcript of Interviews Conducted by James J. Bohning and Jeffrey L. Sturchio at Polytechnic University, Brooklyn, New York on 3 February, 17 March, and 20 June 1986 |date=20 June 1986 |url=https://oh.sciencehistory.org/sites/default/files/mark_h_0030_suppl.pdf|place=Philadelphia, PA|publisher=[[Science History Institute|The Beckman Center for the History of Chemistry]] }} |
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* [https://www.mediathek.at/atom/20044F9A-32A-0002C-00002061-2003E59D/ Interview (in german) with Hermann Mark] in the online archive of the [[Österreichische Mediathek]] |
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{{Crystallography}} |
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{{Winners of the National Medal of Science}} |
{{Winners of the National Medal of Science}} |
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{{Wolf Prize in Chemistry}} |
{{Wolf Prize in Chemistry}} |
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[[Category:1895 births]] |
[[Category:1895 births]] |
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[[Category:1992 deaths]] |
[[Category:1992 deaths]] |
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[[Category:American chemists]] |
[[Category:20th-century American chemists]] |
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[[Category:American people of Austrian-Jewish descent]] |
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[[Category:Austrian chemists]] |
[[Category:Austrian chemists]] |
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[[Category:Austrian Lutherans]] |
[[Category:Austrian Lutherans]] |
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[[Category:Jewish American scientists]] |
[[Category:Jewish American scientists]] |
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[[Category:Jewish chemists]] |
[[Category:Jewish chemists]] |
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[[Category:Polymer scientists and engineers]] |
[[Category:Polymer scientists and engineers]] |
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[[Category:Foreign |
[[Category:Foreign members of the USSR Academy of Sciences]] |
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[[Category:Foreign |
[[Category:Foreign members of the Russian Academy of Sciences]] |
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[[Category:National Medal of Science laureates]] |
[[Category:National Medal of Science laureates]] |
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[[Category:Recipients of the Austrian Decoration for Science and Art]] |
[[Category:Recipients of the Austrian Decoration for Science and Art]] |
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[[Category:Wolf Prize in Chemistry laureates]] |
[[Category:Wolf Prize in Chemistry laureates]] |
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[[Category:Polytechnic Institute of New York University faculty]] |
[[Category:Polytechnic Institute of New York University faculty]] |
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[[Category:20th-century Lutherans]] |
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[[Category:Austro-Hungarian military personnel of World War I]] |
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[[Category:Fellows of the American Physical Society]] |
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[[Category:Presidents of the Society of Rheology]] |
Latest revision as of 07:05, 13 September 2024
Herman Francis Mark (born Hermann Franz Mark; May 3, 1895, Vienna – April 6, 1992, Austin, Texas) was an Austrian-American chemist regarded for his contributions to the development of polymer science. Mark's X-ray diffraction work on the molecular structure of fibers provided important evidence for the macromolecular theory of polymer structure. Together with Houwink he formulated an equation, now called the Mark–Houwink or Mark–Houwink–Sakurada equation, describing the dependence of the intrinsic viscosity of a polymer on its relative molecular mass (molecular weight). He was a long-time faculty at Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn.[1] In 1946, he established the Journal of Polymer Science.
Biography
[edit]Early life
[edit]Mark was born in Vienna in 1895, the son of Hermann Carl Mark, a physician, and Lili Mueller. Mark's father was Jewish, but converted to Christianity (Lutheran Church) upon marriage.[2]
Several early stimuli apparently steered Herman Mark to science. He was greatly influenced by a teacher, Franz Hlawaty, who made mathematics and physics understandable. At the age of twelve, he and his friend toured the laboratories of the University of Vienna. His friend's father, who taught science, arranged the tour. The visit excited both boys and before long they turned their bedrooms into laboratories. Both had access to chemicals through their fathers, and they were soon performing experiments.[2]
World War I
[edit]Mark served as an Officer in the elite k.k. Kaiserschützen Regiment Nr. II of the Austro-Hungarian Army during World War I. He was highly decorated and the Austrian hero of the alpine Battle of Mount Ortigara in June 1917.[citation needed]
X-ray diffraction
[edit]Mark worked on X-ray diffraction caused by passage through gases along with physicist Raimund Wierl.[3] This led to the computation of intermolecular distances. Linus Pauling learned X-ray diffraction from Mark, and that knowledge led to Pauling's seminal work on the structure of proteins.
Albert Einstein asked Mark and his colleagues to use the intense and powerful X-ray tubes available at their laboratory to verify the Compton Effect; this work provided the strongest confirmation yet of Einstein's light quantum theory for which he won the Nobel Prize in Physics.[2]
IG Farben
[edit]In 1926, chemist Kurt Meyer of IG Farben offered Mark the assistant directorship of research at one of the company's laboratories. In his years at Farben, Mark worked on the first serious attempts at the commercialization of polystyrene, polyvinyl chloride, polyvinyl alcohol, and the first synthetic rubbers. Mark helped make Farben a leader in manufacturing and distribution of new polymers and co-polymers.
Mark's son Hans Mark (1929–2021) later became an American government official.
With the rise of Nazi power, Mark's plant manager recognised that as a foreigner and the son of a Jewish father he would be most vulnerable. Mark took his manager's advice and accepted a position as professor of physical chemistry at the University of Vienna, which brought him back to the city where he grew up. Mark's stay in Vienna lasted six very successful years during which he designed a new curriculum in polymer chemistry and continued research in the field of macromolecules.
In September 1937, Mark met C.B. Thorne, an official with the Canadian International Pulp and Paper Company, in Dresden. At the meeting, Thorne offered Mark a position as research manager with the company in Hawkesbury, Ontario, Canada, with the goal of modernizing its production of wood pulp for the purpose of making rayon, cellulose acetate, and cellophane. Mark replied that he was busy but that he would try to visit Canada the following year to help reorganize the company's research facilities.
Escape from Nazi Europe
[edit]In early 1938 Mark began preparing to leave Austria by delegating his administrative duties to colleagues. At the same time he clandestinely started to buy platinum wire, worth roughly $50,000, which he bent into coat hangers while his wife knitted covers so that the hangers could be taken out of the country.[2]
When Hitler's troops invaded Austria and declared the Anschluss (the political union of Germany and Austria), Mark was arrested and thrown into a Gestapo prison. He was released with a warning not to contact anyone Jewish. He was also stripped of his passport. He retrieved his passport by paying a bribe equal to a year's salary, and he obtained a visa to enter Canada and transit visas through Switzerland, France, and England. At the end of April, Mark and his family mounted a Nazi flag on the radiator of their car, strapped ski equipment on the roof, and drove across the border, reaching Zurich the next day. From there, the family traveled to England via France, and in September, Mark, temporarily leaving his family behind, boarded a boat to Montreal.[2]
United States
[edit]From Canada, Mark went to the United States, where he joined the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn. There he established a strong polymer program which included not only research but the first undergraduate polymer education in the United States.[4][5][6]
Some of Mark's earliest work at the Brooklyn Polytechnic involved experiments with reinforcing ice by mixing water with wood pulp or cotton wool before freezing. In 1942, the results of these experiments were later passed to Max Perutz who had been a student of Mark in Vienna, but was now in the UK. Max Perutz's work would lead to the development of Pykrete.[7]
In 1946, Mark established the Polymer Research Institute at Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, the first research facility in the United States dedicated to polymer research. Mark is also recognized as a pioneer in establishing curriculum and pedagogy for the field of polymer science.[2] In 1950, the POLY division of the American Chemical Society was formed, and has since grown to the second-largest division in this association with nearly 8,000 members.[citation needed]
In 2003, the American Chemical Society designated the Polymer Research Institute as a National Historic Chemical Landmark.[2]
Decorations and awards
[edit]- 1960: William H. Nichols Medal
- 1965: Austrian Decoration for Science and Art
- 1966: Foreign member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences
- 1966: Elliott Cresson Medal
- 1972: Chemical Pioneer Award
- 1975: Willard Gibbs Award
- 1975: Aachen and Munich Prize for Technology and Applied Sciences
- 1976: Harvey Prize
- 1979: National Medal of Science (United States)
- 1979: Wolf Prize in Chemistry
- 1980: Colwyn medal[8]
- 1980: Perkin Medal[9]
- 1988: Charles Goodyear Medal
Books
[edit]- Giant Molecules (Series: LIFE Science Library) (1966)
- Encyclopedia of Polymer Science and Technology 1st. Ed. 1964 4th. Ed. 2007
References
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ "Herman Francis Mark | American chemist". 30 April 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Herman Mark and the Polymer Research Institute". National Historic Chemical Landmarks. American Chemical Society. Retrieved 2015-12-01.
- ^ Hargittai, Istvan (2022). "Herman F. Mark – Pioneer of polymer chemistry and initiator of the gas-phase electron diffraction technique of molecular structure determination". Structural Chemistry. 33 (4): 1379–1384. doi:10.1007/s11224-022-01937-9. ISSN 1040-0400. S2CID 248121005.
- ^ Center for Oral History. "Herman Mark". Science History Institute.
- ^ Bohning, James J.; Sturchio, Jeffrey L. (20 June 1986). Herman Mark, Transcript of Interviews Conducted by James J. Bohning and Jeffrey L. Sturchio at Polytechnic University, Brooklyn, New York on 3 February, 17 March, and 20 June 1986 (PDF). Philadelphia, PA: The Beckman Center for the History of Chemistry.
- ^ "Herman Mark and the Polymer Research Institute". Archived from the original on 2009-05-05. Retrieved 2007-11-07.
- ^ Perutz, 2002, p. 83
- ^ "Colwyn Medal award winners". iom3. Retrieved 25 September 2017.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "SCI Perkin Medal". Science History Institute. 31 May 2016. Retrieved 24 March 2018.
General references
[edit]- Perutz, Max (2002). I Wish I Made You Angry Earlier (paperback ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-859027-X.
External links
[edit]- Morawetz, Herbert (1995). Herman Francis Mark, 1895—1992 A Biographical Memoir (PDF). Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences.
- Center for Oral History. "Herman Mark". Science History Institute.
- Bohning, James J.; Sturchio, Jeffrey L. (20 June 1986). Herman Mark, Transcript of Interviews Conducted by James J. Bohning and Jeffrey L. Sturchio at Polytechnic University, Brooklyn, New York on 3 February, 17 March, and 20 June 1986 (PDF). Philadelphia, PA: The Beckman Center for the History of Chemistry.
- Interview (in german) with Hermann Mark in the online archive of the Österreichische Mediathek
- Scientists from Vienna
- 1895 births
- 1992 deaths
- 20th-century American chemists
- Austrian chemists
- Austrian Lutherans
- Jewish American scientists
- Jewish chemists
- Jewish emigrants from Austria after the Anschluss to the United States
- Polymer scientists and engineers
- Foreign members of the USSR Academy of Sciences
- Foreign members of the Russian Academy of Sciences
- National Medal of Science laureates
- Recipients of the Austrian Decoration for Science and Art
- Wolf Prize in Chemistry laureates
- Polytechnic Institute of New York University faculty
- 20th-century Lutherans
- 20th-century American Jews
- Austro-Hungarian military personnel of World War I
- Fellows of the American Physical Society
- Presidents of the Society of Rheology