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         Macdiarmid Alan G:     more books (15)
  1. Organometallic Compounds of the Group IV Elements: The Bond to Carbon
  2. Handbook of Polyelectrolytes and Their Applications (Vols 1-3) by Nalwa Hari Singh, Alan G. MacDiarmid, 2002-07
  3. THE BOND TO HALOGENS AND HALOGENOIDS (in 2 parts): Part II of II. Organometallic Compounds of the Group IV Elements Series, Volume 1. by Alan G. (Ed) MacDiarmid, 1968-01-01
  4. Bond to halogens and halogenoids by Alan G Macdiarmid, 1972
  5. Inorganic Syntheses, Vol. 17
  6. Organometallic Compounds the Group IV Elements the Bond to Halogens and Halogenoids by MacDiarmid Alan G., 1972-01-01
  7. The Bond to Carbon. Part 1 & 2.organometallic Compounds of the Group IV Elements Volune1&2 by MacDiarmid Alan G, 1968
  8. Bond to carbon by Alan G MacDiarmid, 1968
  9. The Bond to Carbon Volume 1 Parts 1 and 2 by Alan G. MacDiarmid, 1968
  10. The Bond to Halogens and Halogenoids -Part I of Volume 2of the Organometallic Compounds of the Group IV Elememts series by Alan G. -editor MacDiarmid, 1972
  11. Philadelphia Section Honors International Award Winner.(chemist Dr. Alan G. MacDiarmid wins Society of Plastics Engineers award)(Brief Article): An article from: Plastics Engineering by James P. Toner, 2001-05-01
  12. Alan G. MacDiarmid (German Edition)
  13. Bond To Carbon Volume 1 Part 1 of Organometa by Alan G Macdiarmid, 1968-01-01
  14. SPE INTERNATIONAL AWARDS are presented at ANTEC 2001.: An article from: Plastics Engineering

1. ALAN G MacDIARMID
Alan G. MacDiarmid Blanchard Professor of Chemistry. Office 343Chemistry, 231 South 34 th Street, Philadelphia, PA 191046323. Tel
http://www.sas.upenn.edu/~macdiarm/
Alan G. MacDiarmid Blanchard Professor of Chemistry
Office: 343 Chemistry 231 South 34 th Street Philadelphia, PA 19104-6323 Tel: 215-898-8307 Fax: 215-898-8378 macdiarm@sas.upenn.edu
Who is Alan MacDiarmid?
Research Academic Collaborations Selected Publications

2. Alan G. MacDiarmid
Alan G. MacDiarmid Blanchard Professor of Chemistry. Alan MacDiarmid,codiscoverer of the field of conducting polymers, more commonly
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3. Macdiarmid
Alan G. MacDiarmid born April 14, 1927, New Zealand. Alan G. MacDiarmid shared aNobel Prize in Chemistry with Dr. Alan J. Heeger and Dr. Hideki Shirakawa.
http://chem.ch.huji.ac.il/~eugeniik/history/macdiarmid.htm
Alan G. MacDiarmid
born April 14, 1927, New Zealand
Alan MacDiarmid, co-discoverer of the field of conducting polymers, more commonly known as "synthetic metals," was the chemist responsible in 1977 for the chemical and electrochemical doping of polyacetylene, (CH) x , the "prototype" conducting polymer, and the "rediscovery" of polyaniline, now the foremost industrial conducting polymer. Alan G. MacDiarmid shared a Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Dr. Alan J. Heeger and Dr. Hideki Shirakawa . The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the prize to the three for the discovery and development of conductive polymers.
Alan G. MacDiarmid (born April 14, 1927; mother, Ruby and father, Archibald MacDiarmid ) grew up in New Zealand, and received his Ph.D. at University of Wisconsin 1953 and at University of Cambridge, UK, 1955. He was associate professor at University of Pennsylvania 1956 and received a professorship there 1964. Since 1988 he is Blanchard Professor of Chemistry. In 1973, he began research on (SN) x , an unusual polymeric material with metallic conductivity. His interest in organic conducting polymers began in 1975 when he was introduced to a new form of polyacetylene by Dr. Hideki Shirakawa at the Tokyo Institute of Technology. The ensuing collaboration between MacDiarmid, Shirakawa and Alan Heeger (then at the Department of Physics at the University of Pennsylvania) led to the historic discovery of metallic conductivity in an organic polymer.

4. WIEM: MacDiarmid Alan
macdiarmid alan g. (1927), amerykanski chemik. Fizyka, Stany Zjednoczone MacDiarmidAlan (1927-). macdiarmid alan g. (1927-), amerykanski chemik.
http://wiem.onet.pl/wiem/015964.html
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MacDiarmid Alan
MacDiarmid Alan G. (1927-), amerykañski chemik. Studiowa³ na Uniwersytecie w  Nowej Zelandii , na Uniwersytecie stanu Wisconsin Uniwersytecie w Cambridge , nastêpnie podj±³ pracê na wydziale Uniwersytetu w  Pensylwanii , gdzie obecnie jest profesorem chemii. Wspó³odkrywca pó³przewodz±cych polimerów . W 1977 wraz z  A. J. Heegerem domieszkowa³ zpolimeryzowany przez H. Shirakawê poliacetylen, stwarzaj±c w ten sposób organiczny polimer o przewodnictwie metalicznym. Dokona³ te¿ ponownego odkrycia polianiliny, obecnie najpowszechniej u¿ywanego polimeru przewodz±cego. Przez ostatnie 20 lat zajmowa³ siê syntez±, chemi±, elektrochemi±, przewodnictwem, magnetycznymi i optycznymi w³a¶ciwo¶ciami polimerów przewodz±cych pr±d. Autor oko³ 600 prac naukowych i 20 patentów. Laureat wielu presti¿owych nagród i honorowych tytu³ów. W 1999 uhonorowany Nagrod± Amerykañskiego Chemicznego Towarzystwa w dziedzinie chemii materia³ów.

5. All.info: Science And Health / Chemistry / Chemists /
ALAN G macdiarmid alan g macdiarmid alan g. MacDiarmid Blanchard Professor of ChemistryOffice 343 Chemistry 231 South 34 th Street Philadelphia, PA 19104
http://all.info/directory/Science_and_Health/Chemistry/Chemists/
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Welcome to the Linus Pauling Institute

Welcome to the Linus Pauling Institute Welcome to the Linus Pauling Institute The Linus Pauling Institute was established at Oregon State University in August 1996 under an agreement reached between OSU and its antecedent...
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Society of Cosmetic Chemists - Midwest Chapter
Society of Cosmetic Chemists - Midwest Chapter Welcome to the homepage for the Midwest Chapter of the Society of Cosmetic Chemists. We are a non-profit organization that represents one of the largest regional groups of formulators...
http://www.midwestscc.org/

6. Past Ralph Connor Memorial Lecturers
Past Ralph Connor Memorial Lecturers 2001, Alan G. macdiarmid alan g. MacDiarmid,the Blanchard Professor of Chemistry at the University of Pennsylvania
http://www.chemheritage.org/events/event-nav2-connorpast.html
Past Ralph Connor Memorial Lecturers
John W. Caldwell
“Using the Orange, Seeking the Green, and Helping the Red, White, and Blue: Patent Challenges and Opportunities in Pharmaceutical Business”
2001, Alan G. MacDiarmid
Alan G. MacDiarmid, the Blanchard Professor of Chemistry at the University of Pennsylvania, shared the 2000 Nobel Prize in chemistry with Alan J. Heeger and Hideki Shirakawa "for the discovery and development of conductive polymers." The award recognized a remarkable discovery—that under the right circumstances plastic can be made to behave very like a metal, to conduct electricity—a breakthrough that opened the door to a range of polymer-based electronics that can be produced quickly and cheaply. These products may also be a stepping-stone to real molecular-scale electronics, perhaps the next great advance of the computer age.
MacDiarmid has received numerous other awards, including the 1999 Award in Materials Chemistry from the American Chemical Society, the Chemical Pioneer Award from the American Institute of Chemists, and the John Scott Award from the City of Philadelphia. He holds more than 28 patents and is the author or coauthor of approximately 600 research papers.

7. Bookmarks For David T.
Amateur Radio Site Alan Goldman Laura H. Greene Alan Heeger Alan Heeger 2 ClausJacobsen Katalin Kamaras Miles V. Klein Ricardo Lobo Alan G. macdiarmid alan g
http://www.phys.ufl.edu/~tanner/bookmark.htm
Bookmarks for David T.
UF Physics World Wide Web (WWW) Server Office of the Dean David Tanner Home Page Alta Vista ... Astronomy Picture of the Day Archive
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ORGs
The American Physical Society Axions - LLNL Jefferson Lab LIGO Home Page ... United States Geological Survey
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UF Smathers Libraries Home Page APS Research Journals APS PROLA search page Elsevier journals ... XXX e-Print archive
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Dept. of Energy, Office of Energy Research DOE - Basic Energy Sciences (BES) DOE - Grant Solicitation Notices Chicago Operations Office DOE ... Various grant anouncements - Yosi - Electroactive polymers
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8. Penn Department Of Chemistry - Faculty
Chemistry Home Department Information Faculty alan G. macdiarmid.Dr. alan G. macdiarmid Blanchard Professor of Chemistry.
http://www.sas.upenn.edu/chem/faculty/macdiarmid/macdiarmid.html
Chemistry Home Department Information Faculty Dr. Alan G. MacDiarmid - Blanchard Professor of Chemistry
MATERIALS AND POLYMER CHEMISTRY OFFICE: 343 N
LAB: 337,335,333,208 N
PHONE: (215) 898-8307
E-MAIL: macdiarm@sas.upenn.edu Born: 1927
EDUCATION AND ACADEMIC HISTORY:
  • M.Sc., University of New Zealand (1950)
  • Ph.D., University of Wisconsin (1953)
  • Ph.D., University of Cambridge (1955)
  • Ph.D. (hon.), Linkoping University (Sweden) (1990)
  • Philadelphia Section Award, American Chemical Society (1967)
  • Frederic Stanley Kipping Award, American Chemical Society (1970)
  • Marshall Award, American Chemical Society (1982)
  • Doolittle Award, American Chemical Society (1982)
  • Royal Society of Chemistry Centenary Medal and Lectureship (England) (1983)
  • Chemical Pioneer Award, American Institute of Chemists (1984)
  • "Top 100" Innovation Award, Science Digest (1985)
  • Blanchard Professor of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania (1988)
  • John Scott Award, City of Philadelphia (1989)
  • Francis J. Clamer Award, The Franklin Institute (1993)
  • Chemistry of Materials Award, American Chemical Society (1999)

9. Alan G. MacDiarmid - Autobiography
alan G. macdiarmid – Autobiography. I was born a Kiwi (a New Zealander)in Masterton, New Zealand on April 14, 1927, and still
http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/2000/macdiarmid-autobio.html
I was born a Kiwi (a New Zealander) in Masterton, New Zealand on April 14, 1927, and still am a Kiwi by New Zealand law, although I became a naturalized United States citizen many years ago in order to have the right to vote in US elections and, hence, voice my political opinions in a meaningful way. My father, an engineer, was unemployed for four years during the Great Depression which hit New Zealand rather severely in the early 1930s. Since jobs were believed to be more plentiful in the vicinity of Wellington, the capital city of New Zealand, located at the bottom of the North Island, we moved to Lower Hutt a few miles from Wellington. There my two older brothers and my elder sister were able to find jobs while I and my younger sister were still at primary school. It is my home life while growing up through high school, which I consider to have been the single most important factor in any success which I may have had in life. As my parents always said, "...an 'A's grade in a class is not a sign of success." Success is knowing that you have done your best and have exploited your God-given or gene-given abilities to the next maximum extent. More than this, no one can do. Alan (age 10).

10. The New Zealand Edge : Heroes : Www.nzedge.com : Alan MacDiarmid
In 2000 alan macdiarmid jointly won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the discovery and development of conductive polymers which amongest other things has revolutionised electronics. work of New
http://www.nzedge.com/heroes/macdiarmid.html
Alan MacDiarmid Family Catalyst Boy Chemist Science and Serendipity Research, Dedication, Application ... Nancy Wake
Alan MacDiarmid
PLASTIC FANTASTIC
For a hundred years young graduates have been told that “there's a great future in plastics.” That exhortation continues to have currency today, thanks to the work of New Zealand born and educated scientist Alan MacDiarmid who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2001 for his and his colleagues' "discovery and development of electronically conductive polymers." The Nobel Prize recognized advances that are seen to be the future of the technology that fuels the progress of the age of information. Alan, the model of a scientist, lives by the sign in his study: “I am a very lucky person and the harder I work the luckier I seem to be.” In January of 1892 young Archie MacDiarmid had a country holiday at the farm of friends, the Rutherfords at Pungarehu on the Taranaki coast near Cape Egmont. In a letter home Archie mentioned that one of the Rutherford boys, "Earnest" had made 28 gallons of wine. Ernest Rutherford's nomination for the 1907 Nobel Prize in Chemistry failed. Instead it was awarded to Edward Buchner of the University of Berlin for his studies of the fermentation process. But Rutherford received the 1908 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, for his fundamental discovery that the natural transmutation of heavy atoms was the explanation of radioactivity.

11. LRSM Faculty Member: ALAN G. MACDIARMID
The Laboratory for Research on the Structure of Matter Faculty member alan G. macdiarmid Faculty Directory  . alan G. macdiarmid. Professor of Chemistry
http://www.lrsm.upenn.edu/lrsm/macdiarm.html

Faculty Directory
ALAN G. MACDIARMID
Professor of Chemistry
DESCRIPTION OF RESEARCH INTERESTS:
My research is directed to the study of conducting polymers, more commonly known as "synthetic metals". They are organic polymers that possess the electrical, electronic, magnetic and optical properties of a metal while retaining the mechanical properties, processibility etc., commonly associated with a conventional polymer. Their properties are intrinsic to a "doped" form of the polymer. The concept of doping is the unique, central characteristic which distinguishes conducting polymers from all other types of polymers. During the doping process, an organic polymer, either an insulator or semiconductor having a small conductivity, typically in the range of 10P10 to 10P5 S/cm, is converted to a polymer which is in the "metallic" regime (~1 to ~104 S/cm). The controlled addition of known, usually small ( <10%) and non-stoichiometric quantities of chemical species results in dramatic changes in the electronic, electrical, magnetic, optical and structural properties of the polymer. Doping is reversible to produce the original polymer with little or no degradation of the polymer backbone. Both doping and undoping processes, involving dopant counter ions which stabilize the doped state, may be carried out chemically or electrochemically. Since the discovery of conducting polymers at Penn in the mid-seventies, the field has expanded extremely rapidly world-wide. This has resulted both from the interdisciplinary nature of the field chemistry, electrochemistry, physics, electrical/electronic engineering and from the rapidly expanding technological interest in the field.

12. Alan G. MacDiarmid Winner Of The 2000 Nobel Prize In Chemistry
alan G. macdiarmid, the 2000 Nobel Prize Laureate in Chemistry, at the Nobel Prize Internet Archive. alan G. macdiarmid. 2000 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry Proctor, PhD, MD) alan G. macdiarmid
http://www.almaz.com/nobel/chemistry/2000b.html
A LAN G M AC D IARMID
2000 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
    for the discovery and development of conductive polymers.
Background

13. Chemistry 2000
alan J. Heeger, alan G. macdiarmid, Hideki Shirakawa. alan G. macdiarmid AutobiographyNobel Lecture Interview Nobel Diploma Prize Award Photo Other Resources.
http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/2000/
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2000
"for the discovery and development of conductive polymers" Alan J. Heeger Alan G. MacDiarmid Hideki Shirakawa 1/3 of the prize 1/3 of the prize 1/3 of the prize USA USA and New Zealand Japan University of California
Santa Barbara, CA, USA University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA, USA University of Tsukuba
Tokyo, Japan b. 1936 b. 1927
(in Masterton, New Zealand) b. 1936 The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2000
Prize Announcement

Press Release

Advanced Information
...
Other Resources
The 2000 Prize in:
Physics

Chemistry
Physiology or Medicine Literature ... Economic Sciences Find a Laureate: SITE FEEDBACK CONTACT TELL A FRIEND Last modified December 18, 2003 The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

14. Alan G. MacDiarmid Winner Of The 2000 Nobel Prize In Chemistry
alan G. macdiarmid, the 2000 Nobel Prize Laureate in Chemistry, atthe Nobel Prize Internet Archive. alan G. macdiarmid. 2000 Nobel
http://almaz.com/nobel/chemistry/2000b.html
A LAN G M AC D IARMID
2000 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
    for the discovery and development of conductive polymers.
Background

15. MacDiarmid, Alan G.
macdiarmid, alan G. I was born a Kiwi (a New Zealander) in Masterton,New Zealand on April 14, 1927, and still am a Kiwi by New
http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/M/macDiarmid/mac
MacDiarmid, Alan G.
I was born a Kiwi (a New Zealander) in Masterton, New Zealand on April 14, 1927, and still am a Kiwi by New Zealand law, although I became a naturalized United States citizen many years ago in order to have the right to vote in US elections and, hence, voice my political opinions in a meaningful way. My father, an engineer, was unemployed for four years during the Great Depression which hit New Zealand rather severely in the early 1930s. Since jobs were believed to be more plentiful in the vicinity of Wellington, the capital city of New Zealand, located at the bottom of the North Island, we moved to Lower Hutt a few miles from Wellington. There my two older brothers and my elder sister were able to find jobs while I and my younger sister were still at primary school. It is my home life while growing up through high school, which I consider to have been the single most important factor in any success which I may have had in life. As my parents always said, "...an 'A's grade in a class is not a sign of success." Success is knowing that you have done your best and have exploited your God-given or gene-given abilities to the next maximum extent. More than this, no one can do. For a period in grade school, I attended a two-room school in Keri Keri (town population, 600) where most of my school chums were Maori boys and girls from whom I learned so much. During much of my time at grade school I had an early morning, pre-school job delivering milk on my bicycle for Mr. Bradley, who had a few cows in a nearby paddock. My mother was superb - she would get up with me while it was still dark to make me hot tea to send me on my way. When I started high school it was necessary to give up my Milk route. Instead, I delivered the "Evening Post" newspaper on my bicycle after school.

16. Alan G. MacDiarmid --  Encyclopædia Britannica
MLA style " alan G. macdiarmid." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2004 APA style alan G. macdiarmid. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved May 3, 2004, from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=409101&source=SEO

17. Alan G. MacDiarmid --  Britannica Concise Encyclopedia Online Article
macdiarmid, alan G. Britannica Concise. alan G. macdiarmid. born April 14, 1927, Masterson,NZ. MLA style alan G. macdiarmid. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia.
http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/article?eu=409634

18. Alan G. MacDiarmid - Prize Award Photo
macdiarmid Prize Award Photo. alan G. macdiarmid receiving his Nobel Prize from His Majesty the King at the Stockholm Concert Hall 2000. Photo Hans Mehlin, Nobel eMuseum. 1999. 2001. The 2000 Prize in Physics. Chemistry
http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/2000/macdiarmid-award.html
Alan G. MacDiarmid receiving his Nobel Prize from His Majesty the King at the Stockholm Concert Hall 2000.
Photo: Hans Mehlin, Nobel e-Museum. The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2000
Prize Announcement

Press Release

Advanced Information
...
Other Resources
The 2000 Prize in:
Physics

Chemistry

Physiology or Medicine

Literature
...
Economic Sciences
Find a Laureate: SITE FEEDBACK CONTACT TELL A FRIEND Last modified June 2, 2004 The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

19. Shirakawa Hideki --  Britannica Concise Encyclopedia Online Article
In 1977 he started collaborating with alan J. Heeger and alan G. macdiarmid, conductingexperiments on the polymer polyacetylene. , macdiarmid, alan G. New
http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/article?eu=409635

20. MSN Encarta - MacDiarmid, Alan G.
Sign in above. macdiarmid, alan G. macdiarmid, alan G. (1927 ), New Zealand-bornAmerican chemist and cowinner of the 2000 Nobel Prize in chemistry.
http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_701500007/MacDiarmid_Alan_G.html
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