Christian Amatore

Christian Amatore (born 9 December 1951 in Algeria) is a French chemist and a member of the French Academy of Sciences. He is an author of works in electrochemistry.

Biography

Coming from a modest family (Sicilian by his father, Swedish by his mother), he spent a large part of his childhood in Algeria in several garrison towns of Laghouat, Hain-el-Adjar, Sidi Bel Abbès where his father was an NCO of the Foreign Legion. He followed his father's advice "if you are intelligent but you have no education, you remain mute" and followed brilliant studies in Algeria and then in France where his Blackfoot family was repatriated: first to the Lycée Pascal-Paoli in Corte, then to the Lycée Thiers in Marseille where he completed two years of preparatory classes,[1][2] and finally to the École normale supérieure (rue d'Ulm - Paris) where he obtained the agrégation de chimie in 1974. At the age of 18, he opted for French nationality. CNRS researcher, following his thesis at the University of Paris-VII, he left for the United States for two years as Assistant Professor in an organometallic chemistry research laboratory where he met Mark Wightman at Indiana University with whom he had a pioneering role in the development of ultramicroelectrodes that he applied in artificial synapses. In 1984, he returned to France to found his laboratory at the ENS and became Director of the Chemistry Department at the ENS in 1997.[3] He held these management functions until 2006.[4]

Career

  •    Normalien (1971), agrégé de chimie (1974), docteur ès sciences (1979), docteur honoris causa from several European and Asian universities
  •    Research Director at the CNRS, Professor at the ENS.
  •    Correspondent of the French Academy of Sciences in April 1996, member in November 2002.[5]
  •    Delegate for Education and Training of the French Academy of Sciences (2011)
  •    Member of the steering committee of the Fondation Écologie d'Avenir.[6]
gollark: Sure it can!
gollark: Yes, I'm not saying you're not.
gollark: Calling random things virtues is a virtue.
gollark: Except to the extent which is necessary to get people to *think* of you as ethical or whatever so they might be nicer to you.
gollark: Well, if your moral framework is "what's good for me", you don't really!

References

  1. "La science dans tous ses états". www.sciences-corse.fr. Retrieved 2019-02-08.
  2. "Christian Amatore, le chimiste anticonformiste". www.canalacademie.com. Retrieved 2019-02-08.
  3. Christian Amatore, le chimiste anticonformiste, entretien sur Canal Académie, 1er mai 2011
  4. "Christian Amatore - Biographie, CV". www.academie-sciences.fr (in French). Retrieved 2018-05-03.
  5. "Académie des sciences".
  6. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-05-27. Retrieved 2019-10-11.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.