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Satoyasu Iimori

Satoyasu Iimori
Born(1885-10-19)19 October 1885
Died13 October 1982(1982-10-13) (aged 96)
NationalityJapanese
Alma materTokyo Imperial University
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions
Academic advisorsFrederick Soddy[1]


Satoyasu Iimori (19 October 1885 – 13 October 1982) was a Japanese analytical chemist, and the pioneer of radiochemistry. He was the honorary research member of the Institute of Physical and Chemical Research (RIKEN) and also the honorary member of the Chemical Society of Japan as well as the Society of the Analytical Chemistry of Japan. He is so called “the father of radiochemistry in Japan”, as his establishment in the study of radiochemistry which was not developed at that time in Japan and his contribution for the study. After his retirement as the researcher he was interested in creation of artificial gemstones.

Biography[edit]

He was born in Kanazawa City, Ishikawa Pref. in 1885. In 1906 he entered the Department of Chemistry of Tokyo Imperial University, where studied under Tamemasa Haga and Kikunae Ikeda. Continuing his study in the graduate college of the university, he was conferred the Degree of Doctorate of Science for his research relation to cyano-complex compounds of iron.

[kagakushigakkai henshu 1]

In 1917 he entered the Institute of Physical and Chemical Research (RIKEN), where he started to work in the research of analysis of various minerals. As he appointed to study radiochemistry, he went to U.K. in 1919. He was appointed to join the laboratory of Frederick Soddy, however due to the circumstance of Soddy he studied in the laboratory with Charles Heycock for a while, who was the chemist in the Cambridge University. He joined to work in the laboratory of Frederick Soddy [kagakushigakkai henshu 2] from October 1920 until June 1921, in which his study was focused on the radiochemistry. [kagakushigakkai henshu 3] After returning to Japan, he led his own laboratory as the chief researcher of RIKEN. Along with working for the research of radiochemistry, the laboratory conducted the research of analytical chemistry, mineralogical chemistry, photochemistry, geochemistry especially of rare elements, luminescence of minerals and ceramics as well.[Nihon Chikyu Kagakukai 1]

During the World War II he worked for the search of uranium containing ore in the project “Ni-Goh Kenkyu(Project NIGO)” as his major research was mainly focused on radiochemical minerals. After the war the research of radiochemistry was prohibited by US authority, he started to develop in the field of ceramic materials and retired from RIKEN in 1952.[kagakushigakkai henshu 4]

While he had his specific interest in the “actinolite” he tried to create it and this creation made him start the various creation of artificial gemstones. They are based on his own idea as a mineralogist. [2] They were called “IL Stone”, which had patented in 1955. He established “Iimori Laboratory, Ltd.” to run the business for the creation and trading them. Some of those gemstones were exported mostly to the U.S. in 70’s as well as traded in Japan.[3]

Translation “Isotope” into Japanese as “Doi genso ( 同位元素 )”[edit]

Iimori translated “Isotope” into Japanese as “Doi-genso”. Isotope is the concept delivered in Soddy’s lecture at the London Chemical Conference in 1918. The lecture was introduced in 1919 at the meeting of chemical laboratory of Tokyo Imperial University, where Iimori proposed to translate the word as “ doi genso” in Japanese and it was assented immediately. [4]

  1. ^ George B. Kauffman (1986). Frederick Soddy (1877-1956): Early Pioneer in Radiochemistry (Chemists and Chemistry). Dordrecht; Boston; Hingham: D. Reidel Pub. Co. p. 147. ISBN 978-90-277-1926-3.
  2. ^ Satoyasu, Iimori (1975). "Kagakubunseki sonotano mukashibanashi". Bunseki (6).
  3. ^ Yoshio, Ogino (2003). Iimori Satoyasu Hakase 97Nen no Shogai. Gifu prefecture: Nakatsugawa-shi Koubutsu Hakubutsukan.
  4. ^ *Satoyasu Iimori,translation of Soddy, F., The Conception of the Chemical Elements as Enlarged by the Study of Radioactive Change (放射変化の研究により拡張せられたる化学元素なる概念に就て),"Tokyo Chemical Society", 40, 536,(1919)


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