Sabri Ergun

Sabri Ergun (1 March 1918 18 February 2006) was a Turkish chemical engineer. He is known for the Ergun equation, which expresses the pressure drop across a packed bed.

Sabri Ergun
Born(1918-03-01)March 1, 1918
DiedFebruary 18, 2006(2006-02-18) (aged 87)
NationalityTurkish
Alma materColumbia University
Vienna University of Technology
Known forErgun equation
Scientific career
FieldsChemical engineering
InstitutionsCarnegie Institute of Technology
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Biography

Sabri Ergun was born on 1 March 1918 in Gerede in the Ottoman Empire (now Turkey).[1] He came to the United States in 1943. He received B.S. and M.S. degrees in chemical engineering from Columbia University and a D.Sc. degree from the Vienna University of Technology in 1956. He was married to Dorothy Karns in 1948, and they had three children: David, Robert and James. Ergun served as a staff member of the Coal Research Laboratory at the Carnegie Institute of Technology and was employed by the U.S. Bureau of Mines as project coordinator of Solid State physics. In 1969, he accepted an invitation to serve as a visiting professor at the University of Karlsruhe in Germany. For four years, Ergun worked at Bechtel Corporation as consultant in the field of Waste-to-Oil process development. In 1977, Ergun joined the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory of the University of California where he was responsible for research programs on the production of synthetic fuels from coals and biomass until he retired in 1980. He died in 2006 in Madison, Wisconsin, where he had lived since 1999.[1]

gollark: GUIs tend to be.
gollark: Because it probably is bad.
gollark: A bad one which probably has horrible code?
gollark: Fine,a bad GUI then.
gollark: Ah, an OS. It is bad.

References

  1. Sabri Ergun obituary on legacy.com, originally from the San Francisco Chronicle, 22 February 2006.


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