James White (engineer)

James Lindsay White (January 3, 1938 – November 26, 2009)[1] was an American polymer scientist.

White was a key figure in defining the field of polymer engineering. He founded two polymer engineering programs, one at the University of Tennessee and the other at the University of Akron. He also founded the International Polymer Processing Society and two scholarly journals: the Journal of Polymer Engineering and the International Polymer Processing Journal. He authored the textbook Rubber Processing,[2] which was long popular among engineers. He published more than 500 papers and eight books based on his studies of flow in internal mixers, pin barrel extruders, and twin screw extruders with and without simultaneous chemical reactions.

He received the Charles Goodyear Medal in 2009,[3] for “fundamental understanding of rheology and mathematical modeling of unfilled and filled rubbers and simulations of flow in batch and continuous mixing machines.” He received the Bingham Medal in 1981.

Education

White obtained his BS in chemical engineering at the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. He then pursued graduate studies in the research group of Arthur B. Metzner at the University of Delaware, receiving his MS degree in 1962 and his doctorate in 1965. His research resulted in development of the White-Metzner rheological model, which is still widely used in polymer processing simulations.[4]

Career

References

  1. "James L. White Obituary". Retrieved 21 Oct 2013.
  2. White, James L. (1995). Rubber Processing:Technology, Materials, Principles. Hanser. p. 586.
  3. "James L. White suddenly dies.". Rubber World. December 2009. Retrieved 21 Oct 2013.
  4. "James White, 2009 Charles Goodyear medalist, dies at 71". Rubber and Plastics News. December 2, 2009. Retrieved 21 Oct 2013.
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