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- Q893801 subject Q19057557.
- Q893801 subject Q5660728.
- Q893801 subject Q6362991.
- Q893801 subject Q6490896.
- Q893801 subject Q6646994.
- Q893801 abstract "Professor Boris Vladimirovich Derjaguin (or Deryagin) (9 August 1902, Moscow – 16 May 1994) was one of the renowned Soviet/Russian chemists of the twentieth century. As a member of the Russian Academy of Sciences he laid the foundation of the modern science of colloids and surfaces. An epoch in the development of the physical chemistry of colloids and surfaces is associated with his name. Derjaguin became famous in scientific circles for his work on the stability of colloids and thin films of liquids which is now known as the DLVO theory, after the initials of its authors: Derjaguin, Landau, Verwey, and Overbeek. It is universally included in text books on colloid chemistry and is still widely applied in modern studies of interparticle forces in colloids. In particular, the Derjaguin approximation is widely used in order to approximate the interaction between curved surfaces from a knowledge of the interaction for planar ones.Derjaguin was also briefly involved in polywater research during the 1960s and early 1970s. This field claimed that if water was heated then cooled in quartz capillaries, it took on astonishing new properties. Eventually, the scientists who were involved in polywater admitted it did not exist, claiming they were misled by poorly designed experiments.He is also known for having hotly rejected some of the then-new ideas of adhesion as presented by the Western bloc in the 1970s. His model came to be known as the DMT (after Derjaguin, Muller and Toporov) model, while the model presented by Western bloc scientists came to be known as the JKR (after Johnson, Kendall and Roberts) model for adhesive elastic contact. This rejection proved to be instrumental in the development of the Tabor and later Maugis parameters that quantify which contact model (of the JKR and DMT models) represent adhesive contact better for specific materials.".
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q15180.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q159.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q1783143.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q181780.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q1890780.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q19057557.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q2056830.
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- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q283.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q336.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q43010.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q484298.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q5262636.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q5660728.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q593644.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q6362991.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q649.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q6490896.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q6646994.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q83172.
- Q893801 wikiPageWikiLink Q900807.
- Q893801 type Thing.
- Q893801 comment "Professor Boris Vladimirovich Derjaguin (or Deryagin) (9 August 1902, Moscow – 16 May 1994) was one of the renowned Soviet/Russian chemists of the twentieth century. As a member of the Russian Academy of Sciences he laid the foundation of the modern science of colloids and surfaces. An epoch in the development of the physical chemistry of colloids and surfaces is associated with his name.".
- Q893801 label "Boris Derjaguin".