In thermodynamics, William Francis Giauque (1895-1982) was a Canadian-born American chemist, of the
Lewis school of thermodynamics, noted for being a mentor to American chemical engineer
Frederick Rossini, and for his
1949 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his experimental work on the nature of the
third law of thermodynamics. [1]
Another noted student of Giauque is American engineer
Myron Tribus, a chemistry student at UCLA, whom Giauque taught thermodynamics and statistical mechanics to.
Education Giauque was a student of American chemist
Gilbert Lewis at Berkeley receiving his bachelors there in 1920 and PhD in chemistry with a minor in physics in 1922. He later became a full professor of chemistry there in 1934, where he stayed until his retirement in 1962. Both Lewis and Giauque were teachers and mentors to American chemical thermodynamicist
Frederick Rossini, one of the founders of
political thermodynamics.
References 1. (a) William F. Giauque (biography) – Nobel Prize Organization. (b) Giauque, William G. (1949). “Some Consequences of Low Temperature Research in Chemical Thermodynamics”, Nobel Lecture, December 12.