Ole Lamm

Ole Albert Lamm (December 25, 1902 in Gothenburg August 14, 1964 in Stockholm), was a Swedish physical chemist whose research included diffusion and sedimentation phenomena.

Lamm was a graduate student under Nobel Prize laureate The Svedberg at Uppsala University and received his doctorate in 1937 with the thesis Measurements of concentration gradients in sedimentation and diffusion by refraction methods: Solubility properties of potato starch.[1] In 1945, he was appointed professor of theoretical chemistry, from 1953 physical chemistry, at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm.

Lamm introduced the Lamm equation which describes the concentration distribution of solutes resulting from sedimentation and diffusion under ultracentrifugation in typical sector-shaped cells.[2][3]

In 1957, he was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences and in 1958, a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. At the occasion of his 60th birthday in 1962, a Festschrift was published in his honour.[4]

References

  1. Libris record
  2. O Lamm: (1929) "Die differentialgleichung der ultrazentrifugierung" Arkiv för matematik, astronomi och fysik 21B No. 2, 1-4
  3. NIBIB: Solving the Lamm equation, accessed on May 12, 2009
  4. Libris record for Ole Lamm 60 years, Stockholm 1962
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