Bengt Aurivillius

Bengt Aurivillius (born 4 December 1918 in Linköping, died 2 May 1994 in St. Peter's Parish, Malmöhus County[1]) was a Swedish chemist. A member of the Aurivillius family, his father was the entomologist Christopher Aurivillius.

Bengt Aurivillius
Bengt Aurivillius 1965
Born1918
Died1994
NationalitySwedish
OccupationChemist
Spouse(s)Karin Aurivillius

Career

Aurivillius received his basic scientific education at the then Stockholm University where he graduated in 1937 and earned a fil. lic. in 1943.[2] By 1949, he had made some important discoveries about the oxidation of mixed metals, which became quite prominent in the world of chemistry. He completed his dissertation, "X-ray Examinations of Bismuth Oxifluoride and Mixed Oxides with Trivalent Bismuth", at Stockholm University in 1951. Aurivillius joined the Swedish National Defence Research Institute in 1952, where he worked first as a research engineer and later senior researcher. [2] By 1960, Aurivillius was a docent of physical chemistry and acting senior lecturer at the University of Stockholm. In 1965, he was appointed professor of inorganic chemistry at Lund University, a professorship he held until 1983. During the sixties, he worked in the field of crystallography alongside his wife, Karin Aurivillius.

References

Notes

  1. Swedish Death Book 1901-2013, (Version 6.0) National Archives (2011)
  2. "Trio of professors appointed 'Monday's Council'", Svenska Dagbladet 1965-07-27, s.2
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