Friedrich Bergius
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Friedrich Karl Rudolf Bergius (October 11, 1884 – March 30, 1949) was born near Breslau, Germany (now Wrocław in Poland). In 1931, he and Carl Bosch won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1931 in recognition of their contributions to the invention and development of chemical high pressure methods. After World War II, he moved to Argentina, where he died in 1949.
[edit] See also
- Bergius process for producing synthetic fuel from lignite coal.
[edit] External link
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1926: Svedberg | 1927: Wieland | 1928: Windaus | 1929: Harden, Euler‑Chelpin | 1930: H.Fischer | 1931: Bosch, Bergius | 1932: Langmuir | 1934: Urey | 1935: F.Joliot‑Curie, I.Joliot‑Curie | 1936: Debye | 1937: Haworth, Karrer | 1938: Kuhn | 1939: Butenandt, Ružička | 1943: Hevesy | 1944: Hahn | 1945: Virtanen | 1946: Sumner, Northrop, Stanley | 1947: Robinson | 1948: Tiselius | 1949: Giauque | 1950: Diels, Alder |
es:Friedrich Bergius fr:Friedrich Bergius ko:프리드리히 베르기우스 it:Friedrich Bergius nl:Friedrich Bergius ja:フリードリッヒ・ベルギウス pl:Friedrich Bergius pt:Friedrich Bergius ro:Friedrich Bergius sk:Friedrich Karl Rudolph Bergius

