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BIOGRAPHY OF JOHN. G. KIRKWOOD
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JOHN GAMBLE KIRKWOOD ( 1907 - 1959 ),was a distinguished theoretical physicist best known for his works
in theory of liquids, statistical physics and
statistical mechanics. He belong to those scientists, whose
works contributed substantially to the statistical mechanics, theory of liquids, thermodynamics, many-particle physics
and physical chemistry.
He is known for his works in the statistical theory
of fluids (Kirkwood approximation).
During so shortened interval of his life he managed to create a solid theoretical underpinning for many aspects of modern physical chemistry, with ramifications that still provide compelling directions for investigation many decades after his death. His legacy also includes a group of students and collaborators who developed into outstanding scientists, and whose research activities bear the imprint of the unmistakable Kirkwood style.
JOHN. G. KIRKWOOD born in Gotebo, Oklahoma, USA. He studied physics at the Chicago University (SB, 1926) and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He entered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as a graduate student in the chemistry department in February 1927. He received a Ph.D. in June 1929. His dissertation, under the direction of Frederick Keyes (NAS, 1930), involved measurement of the static dielectric constants of carbon dioxide and ammonia as functions of temperature and density. This research formed the basis for his first two published papers, co-authored with Keyes. Kirkwood's interest in the dielectric properties of matter persisted throughout his later career. In his classic 1939 paper "The Dielectric Polarization of Polar Liquids," he introduced for the first time the concept of orientational correlations for neighboring molecules and showed how these control the dielectric behavior of liquids.
Professor JOHN. G. KIRKWOOD performed research in Europe (1931–2). In the 1920s and early 1930s it was logical for young American scientists to complete their professional training in Europe. An International Research Fellowship provided Kirkwood that opportunity, and the academic year 1931-32 was spent with Peter Debye (NAS, 1947) in Leipzig, with a visit to Arnold Sommerfeld in Munich. Four research papers born during this sojourn were written in German and published in Zeitschrift fur Physik. The Debye-Huckel theory for strong electrolyte solutions was still less than a decade old and its significance and validity were sources of lively debate. Not surprisingly, Kirkwood initiated then what was to become a lifelong research interest in ionic solutions, ultimately producing studies of the structure of concentrated ionic solutions and their electrical double layers.
JOHN. G. KIRKWOOD returned to MIT as a research associate in the Physical Chemistry Research Laboratory, a position he
held during the years 1932-34. His scientific interests during that period included quantum effects on equations of state,
and he carried out seminal investigations of the general statistical mechanics of fluid mixtures and the rigorous theory
of electrolytic solutions. The last of these theoretical developments was honored in 1936 by the American Chemical Society
Award in Pure Chemistry, which at the time was called the Langmuir Prize, and he was one of its youngest recipients.
The next three years (1934-37) saw Kirkwood as assistant professor in the Cornell University chemistry department.
This arrangement was interrupted for a year (1937-38) during which he became associate professor at his second
undergraduate institution, the University of Chicago. He returned to Cornell as Todd Professor of Chemistry for the
years 1938-47. His elegant mathematical
approach to research made him a leader in investigations of electrical properties of gases and liquids, and an innovator in the field of protein
electrophoresis.
The liquid state theory that Kirkwood pioneered during the 1930s and early 1940s continues, sixty years after its introduction, to exert a major scientific influence. The recognition that calculation of the properties of liquids in terms of interactions between the molecules involves solution of a coupled hierarchy of equations laid the foundations for a variety of approaches that exploit intuitive approximations. The first and most famous of these, known as the Kirkwood superposition approximation, was invoked to render solvable the fundamental equations satisfied by molecular distribution functions. Although now replaced by better approximations, the superposition approximation captures the essence of many of the physical effects that dominate the structure and properties of liquids and it continues to resonate throughout many aspects of condensed matter chemistry and physics. But, and more important, the formalism of the theory of distribution functions developed by Kirkwood remains a key part of the theory of liquids.
Another seminal contribution from Kirkwood's Cornell years is the theory of fusion, published in three papers with Elizabeth Monroe in the period 1940-42. This set of papers ranks as one of the major classics in the theory of phase change and has generated a large number of subsequent variants and reinterpretations by other authors. These and other notable contributions to the molecular foundations of physical chemistry formed the basis of Kirkwood's election to the National Academy of Sciences in 1942.
The Second World War produced a major, albeit temporary, shift in Kirkwood's scientific direction. Military requirements of the time made it clear that basic understanding of explosives needed great improvement. Kirkwood took up the challenge and contributed to the war effort as a member of the National Defense Research Committee of the Office of Scientific Research and Development (1942-45) and as a member of the Basic Research Group, which was advisory to the chairman of the Defense Department's Research and Development Board. Kirkwood formulated quantitative theories of detonation and shock waves in air and water, some of which was accomplished in collaboration with H. A. Bethe (NAS, 1944), a colleague from Cornell and coauthor of a paper on order-disorder phenomena. A portion of the studies of explosions was published after the conclusion of the war. The U.S. Navy presented Kirkwood a Meritorious Civilian Service Award in 1945 as recognition for his contributions. In addition, he received a Presidential Certificate of Appreciation in 1947.
The phenomena that concerned most of Kirkwood's research attention prior to 1940 would be considered by chemists as involving low-molecular-weight substances. Subsequently, his attention began to turn to polymeric materials, both synthetic and biological. This trend began with collaborative work with R. M. Fuoss (NAS, 1951), explaining the dielectric loss mechanisms in polar polymers, and was a natural extension of his prior studies of the dielectric properties of polar fluids. Kirkwood's interest in polymers continued to grow and later it led to the development of theories for mechanical relaxation in polymers and hydrodynamic flow and rheological behavior of polymer solutions. Furthermore, in 1941 he devised a new method for the fractionation (and thus separation) of proteins in solution, using electrophoresis-convection. Following World War II this method was applied, with modifications, to the isolation and purification of several significant proteins, including diphtheria antitoxin, and gamma globulin.
The year 1946 was especially notable for the appearance of the first paper in a long series devoted to the fundamental statistical mechanical theory of transport processes. This series of investigations was to remain a major theme in the thinking of Kirkwood and many of his students for the remainder of his life. A key element in this work was the concept of time-averaged molecular distribution functions and their dynamical equations; this was envisaged as a necessary component of any theory that was consistent with physical measurement protocols, and was inextricably connected to irreversibility. While subsequent studies have revealed the necessity of refinements to this point of view, it nevertheless provided a powerful technique for the deeper understanding of Brownian motion, of the Boltzmann and Enskog equations for gas-phase kinetics, and of the viscosity, thermal conductivity, and heat of transport coefficients in pure liquids. Furthermore, it led to derivation of the first autocorrelation function representation in transport theory, for the "friction coefficient," anticipating the later Green-Kubo-Mori-Zwanzig results of the same generic form.
Kirkwood moved from Cornell to California Institute of Technology in 1947 to become the Arthur A. Noyes professor of chemistry. He remained in that position until 1951. This period witnessed the appearance of the Kirkwood-Buff general theories of liquid solutions and of liquid surface tension. It was also the time when the Kirkwood-Riseman theory of macromolecular motions in solution (determining viscosity, diffusion, relaxation) was developed. The first of these theories is one of a tiny group of exact representations of the properties of mixtures in terms of molecular distribution functions and molecular interactions. It was only slowly appreciated, but now is widely used to help interpret experimental data. The last of these theories was, at the time of its introduction and despite the use of some approximations, the most realistic representation of the character of molecular motion of polymers, including both chain connectivity and the influence of the surrounding medium. It has influenced all subsequent developments in the field.
In 1951 Kirkwood accepted the position of Sterling Professor of Chemistry and department head at Yale, where he remained until his death in 1959. He became director of science at Yale in 1958. He also served as foreign secretary of the National Academy of Sciences from 1954 to 1958, a role that no doubt appealed to his early interest in diplomatic service and that must have benefited from his linguistic talent. As foreign secretary, he was involved in scientific contacts with the former Soviet Union at the height of the Cold War, and he monitored the cooperative arrangements required by the International Geophysical Year 1957-58.
Early in 1958 Kirkwood was diagnosed as a cancer victim with an estimated survival period of roughly one year.
He resolved to make the most of his remaining days and in spite of increasing physical pain managed to maintain
scientific activities at a high level. For his students and collaborators in this period, watching this confrontation
between the physical disease and his intellectual resolve was both uncomfortable and inspiring. In this last year of his
life he spent several weeks at the University of Chicago, and he was Lorentz visiting professor at Leiden in early 1959.
The struggle finally ended on August 9, 1959, in Grace-New Haven Hospital. John Gamble Kirkwood was buried in the Grove Street
Cemetery next to the Yale campus, also the final resting site for two other giants of statistical mechanics,
Lars Onsager (NAS, 1947) and Josiah Willard Gibbs (NAS, 1879).
Following his death, John Kirkwood was honored by a three-day memorial symposium, held September 12-14, 1960, in New
York City in conjunction with the 138th national meeting of the American Chemical Society. Many of his former students
and collaborators contributed papers to this symposium, with many others in nostalgic attendance. The proceedings of
this Kirkwood Memorial Symposium appear in the November 1960 issue of the Journal of Chemical Physics, with an
historical introduction by George Scatchard (NAS, 1946).
Since 1962, the Yale University chemistry department and the New Haven section of the American Chemical Society have
administered the John G. Kirkwood Award for outstanding theoretical or experimental research in the physical sciences.
It has been conferred approximately every two years. The first recipient was Kirkwood's former colleague at Yale,
Lars Onsager.
An eight-volume John Gamble Kirkwood Collected Works under the senior editorship of I. Oppenheim was published
by Gordon and Breach Scientific Publishers during 1965-68. These volumes reprinted the majority of his 181
published scientific papers, collected into topical subsets with prefatory comments by former collaborators.
A complete chronological bibliography is available at the National Academy of Sciences archives.
HONORS:
Langmuir Prize (American Chemical Society Award in Pure Chemistry), 1936
Meritorious Civilian Service Award of the U.S. Navy, 1945
Presidential Certificate of Appreciation, 1947
Theodore William Richards Medal of the Northeastern Section of the American Chemical Society, 1950
Gilbert Norton Lewis Medal of the California Section of the American Chemical Society, 1953
Honory Doctor of Science, Chicago University, 1954
Honory Doctor of Science, Free University of Brussels, 1959
[John G. Kirkwood Award from the ACS New Haven Section]
Biographies:
Scatchard, George. John Gamble Kirkwood 1907-1959. Journal of Chemical Physics (1960), 33 1279-81.
TIMASHEFF S N; BROWN R A; CANN J R, John G. Kirkwood, 1907-1959.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics (1960 Feb), 86 i-iii.
Anon. Laurels to Kirkwood and Cram. Chemical & Engineering News (1953), 31 4900-1.
Anon. John G. Kirkwood. Chemical & Engineering News (1950), 28 1823.
Biographical Memoirs, By Stuart A. Rice and Frank H. Stillinger, 1999
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY:
1930
With F. G. Keyes. The dielectric constant of carbon dioxide as a function of temperature and density.
Phys. Rev. 36:754-61.
1932
With G. Scatchard. Das Verhalten von Zwitterionen und von mehrwertigen Ionen mit weit entfernten Ladungen in Electrolytlo"sungen.
Physik. Z. 33:297-300.
1933
Quantum statistics of almost classical assemblies.
Phys. Rev. 44:31-37.
1934
On the theory of strong electrolyte solutions. . Chem. Phys. 2:767-81.
1935
Statistical mechanics of fluid mixtures.
J. Chem. Phys. 3:300-13.
1936
Statistical mechanics of liquid solutions.
Chem. Rev. 19:275-307.
1938
With F. H. Westheimer. The electrostatic influence of substituents on the dissociation constants of organic acids. I.
J. Chem. Phys. 6:506-12.
1939
With H. A. Bethe. Critical behavior of solid solutions in the order-disorder transformation.
J. Chem. Phys. 7:578-82.
The dielectric polarization of polar liquids.
J. Chem. Phys. 7:911-19.
1940
With E. Monroe. On the theory of fusion.
J. Chem. Phys. 8:845-46.
1941
With R. M. Fuoss. Anomalous dispersion and dielectric loss in polar polymers.
J. Chem. Phys. 9:329-40.
A suggestion for a new method of fractionation of proteins by electrophoresis convection.
J. Chem. Phys. 9:878-79.
1942
With E. M. Boggs. The radial distribution function in liquids.
J. Chem. Phys. 10:394-402.
1943
With G. Oster. The influence of hindered molecular rotation on the dielectric constants of water, alcohols, and other polar liquids.
J. Chem. Phys. 11:175-78.
1946
Statistical mechanical theory of transport processes. I. General theory.
J. Chem. Phys. 14:180-201; errata 14:347.
1947
The statistical mechanical theory of transport processes. II. Transport in gases.
J. Chem. Phys. 15:72-76; erratum 15:155.
With S. R. Brinkley, Jr. Theory of the propagation of shock waves.
Phys. Rev. 71:606-11.
1948
With J. Riseman. The intrinsic viscosities and diffusion constants of flexible macromolecules in solution.
J. Chem. Phys. 16:565-73; errata 22:1626-27.
1949
With F. P. Buff. The statistical mechanical theory of surface tension.
J. Chem. Phys. 17:338-43.
1950
Critique of the free volume theory of the liquid state.
J. Chem. Phys. 18:380-82.
With E. K. Maun and B. J. Alder. Radial distribution functions and the equation of state of a fluid composed of rigid spherical molecules.
J. Chem. Phys. 18:1040-47.
1951
With F. P. Buff. Statistical mechanical theory of solutions. I.
J. Chem. Phys. 19:774-77.
1953
With Z. W. Salsburg. The statistical mechanical theory of molecular distribution functions in liquids.
Faraday Soc. Discuss. 15:28-34.
1954
With R. W. Zwanzig, I. Oppenheim, and B. J. Alder. Statistical mechanical theory of transport processes. VII. The coefficient of thermal conductivity of monatomic liquids.
J. Chem. Phys. 22:783-90.
With J. C. Poirier. The statistical mechanical basis of the Debye-Hu"ckel theory of strong electrolytes.
J. Phys. Chem. 58:591-96.
1955
With R. M. Mazo. The structure of liquid helium.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 41:204-209.
1958
With R. D. Cowan. Quantum statistical theory of plasmas and liquid metals.
J. Chem. Phys. 29:264-71.
Brinkley, Stuart R., Jr.; Kirkwood, John G.. Theory of the propagation of shock waves from infinite cylinders of explosive.
Physical Review (1947), 72 1109-13.
Kirkwood, John G.. Errata: Statistical mechanics of transport processes. II. Transport in gases.
Journal of Chemical Physics (1947), 15 155.
Kirkwood, John G.. The statistical mechanical theory of transport processes. II.
Transport in gases. Journal of Chemical Physics (1947), 15 72-6.
Kirkwood, John G.. Errata: Statistical mechanics of transport processes. I. General theory.
Journal of Chemical Physics (1946), 14 347.
Kirkwood, John G.. The statistical mechanical theory of transport processes. I. General theory.
Journal of Chemical Physics (1946), 14 180-201.
Kirkwood, John G.. Elastic loss and relaxation times in cross-linked polymers.
Journal of Chemical Physics (1946), 14 51-6.
Nielsen, Lawrence E.; Kirkwood, John G.. The fractionation of proteins by electrophoresis-convection.
Journal of the American Chemical Society (1946), 68 181-5.