
Harold Urey, circa 1963.
'Harold Clayton Urey' (
April 29,
1893 –
January 5,
1981) was an
American physical chemist whose pioneering work on
isotopes earned him the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1934 and later led him to theories of planetary evolution.
Biography
Urey was born in
Walkerton, Indiana to Reverend Samuel Clayton Urey and Cora Rebecca Riensehl. After briefly teaching in rural schools, Urey earned a degree in
zoology from the
University of Montana and a Ph.D. in chemistry, studying
thermodynamics under
Gilbert N. Lewis at the
University of California, Berkeley.
At Berkeley, Urey was influenced by the work of
physicist Raymond T. Birge and soon joined
Niels Bohr in
Copenhagen to work on atomic structure at the
Institute for Theoretical Physics. On his return to the
U.S. in 1924 he taught at
Johns Hopkins University, and then at
Columbia where he assembled a team of associates that included
Rudolph Schoenheimer,
David Rittenberg and
T. I. Taylor. After completion of his text with
Arthur Ruark, ''Atoms, Quanta and Molecules'', one of the first English texts on quantum mechanics and its applications to atomic and molecular systems, Urey became interested in nuclear systematics. This led to his discovery of
deuterium.
During this time, Urey isolated deuterium by repeatedly
distilling a sample of liquid
hydrogen. In 1931, he and his associates went on to demonstrate the existence of
heavy water. Urey was awarded the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1934 for this work.
[1]
During
World War II, Urey's team at Columbia worked on a number of research programs that contributed towards the
Manhattan Project to develop an
atomic bomb for the United States. Most importantly, they developed the
gaseous diffusion method to separate
uranium-235 from
uranium-238. In autumn 1941, Urey, with
G. B. Pegram, led a diplomatic mission to
England to establishing co-operation on development of the atomic bomb.
After the war, he became professor of chemistry at the
Institute for Nuclear Studies, then Ryerson professor of chemistry at the
University of Chicago before progressing to honorific offices at the
University of California, San Diego. A UCSD building was named in his honor in the early 1960s, during a time when nearly all buildings other than student dormitories had only generic names.
In later life, Urey helped develop the field of
cosmochemistry and is credited with coining the term. His work on
oxygen-18 led him to develop theories about the
abundance of the chemical elements on earth and of their
abundance and evolution in the stars. This work was among the pioneering paleoclimatic research. Urey summarised his work in the book ''The Planets: Their Origin and Development'' (1952). Urey speculated that the early terrestrial
atmosphere was probably composed of
ammonia,
methane and
hydrogen; it was one of his Chicago graduate students,
Stanley L. Miller, who showed that, if such a mixture be exposed to
ultraviolet radiation and to water, it can interact to produce
amino acids, commonly called the "building blocks of life" (''see
Miller-Urey experiment'').
Urey died at
La Jolla, California, and is buried in the Fairfield Cemetery in
DeKalb County, Indiana.
Apart from his Nobel Prize, he also won the
J. Lawrence Smith Medal in 1962, the
Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1966, and the
Priestley Medal of the
American Chemical Society in 1973. Named after him are
lunar impact crater Urey, asteroid
4716 Urey and the
H. C. Urey Prize, awarded for achievement in
planetary sciences by the
American Astronomical Society. The Harold C. Urey Middle School in Walkerton, Indiana, is also named for him, as is Urey Hall, the chemistry building at Revelle College, UCSD, in La Jolla, California. (The actual name of the building is "Freida and Harold Urey Hall" because the naming committee worried that Dr. Urey might reject the honor, but knew he could not decline an honor to his wife.) UCSD has also established a Harold C. Urey chair whose first holder is Dr.
James R. Arnold.
His
Columbia University office in
Havemayer is now used by Professor Brus of the Chemistry department. The corner of the blackboard in the office currently reads: "This office belonged to H.C. Urey, who discovered deuterium"
External links
★
National Academy of Sciences biography
★
A biography
★
Annotated bibliography for Harold Urey from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues
References
1. A Hydrogen Isotope of Mass 2, H. C. Urey, Ferdinand G. Brickwedde, G. M. Murphy, , , Physical Review, 1932
★
Measurement of paleotemperatures and temperatures of the Upper Cretaceous of England, Denmark and the Southeastern United States, Urey H. C., Lowenstam, H. A., Epstein S., McKinney, C. R., , , Geological Society of America Bulletin, 1951