CHEMIST

Aleksandr Arbuzov

1877 - 1968

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Aleksandr Erminingeldovich Arbuzov (Russian: Алекса́ндр Ермининге́льдович Арбу́зов; 12 October 1877 – 22 January 1968) was a Russian and Soviet chemist who discovered the Michaelis–Arbuzov reaction. A native of Bilyarsk, Arbuzov studied in the Kazan University under Alexander Zaytsev. He graduated in 1900 and became professor at the same university in 1911. After World War II he was put in charge of the Soviet Institute of Organic Chemistry. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Aleksandr Arbuzov is the 535th most popular chemist (up from 536th in 2019). (up from 4,335th in 2019)

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Among CHEMISTS

Among chemists, Aleksandr Arbuzov ranks 535 out of 602Before him are Robert Jarvik, Marc Delafontaine, Margaret Oakley Dayhoff, Nikolai Menshutkin, Ida Freund, and Friedrich Accum. After him are Neil Bartlett, Mary L. Good, Sabir Yunusov, Rainer Ludwig Claisen, Gustav Rose, and Johannes Wislicenus.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1877, Aleksandr Arbuzov ranks 163Before him are Julius Curtius, Johannes Schmidt, Consuelo Vanderbilt, Adolf Möller, Oscar Grégoire, and Johann Friedrich Höger. After him are Manuel González García, Elena Guro, Rudolph Dirks, William Beebe, J. Searle Dawley, and Malcolm Whitman. Among people deceased in 1968, Aleksandr Arbuzov ranks 218Before him are Fedde Schurer, Adolf Möller, Albert Dekker, Charles Henry Bartlett, Sid Kimpton, and Marguerite Clayton. After him are Karl-Birger Blomdahl, Anna Kavan, Francis Frederick, Muthulakshmi Reddy, Kōkichi Tsuburaya, and Edward Moore.

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