Valentin Koptyug
Valentin Koptyug | |
---|---|
Born |
Yukhnov, Kaluga Oblast, Soviet Union | 9 June 1931
Died |
10 January 1997 65) Moscow, Soviet Union | (aged
Fields | Chemistry, Chemoinformatics |
Alma mater | D. Mendeleev University of Chemical Technology of Russia |
Valentin Koptyug (Russian: Коптюг Валентин Афанасьевич, 9 Juny 1931, Yukhnov, Kaluga Oblast – 10 January 1997, Moscow) — was a Soviet/Russian scientist, specializing in physical and organic chemistry.[1]
Valentin Koptyug was born in 1931 in Yukhnov in the family of Afanasy Koptyug, who was director of the local communication department, and Nadezhda Koptyug, who was a telegrapher. When young Koptyug was studying in school, his family had to evacuate because of Great Patriotic War. In 1949 he finished school in Samarkand and graduated from D. Mendeleev University of Chemical Technology of Russia in 1954 in Moscow. He was a chancellor of Novosibirsk State University for two years (1978–1980).[2] Koptyug made a huge contribution in development of synthetical, physical and applied chemistry. Also, he founded some large scientific schools in the fields of organic chemistry and chemoinformatics.[3]
There is a monument and a street named after Koptyug in Akademgorodok, Novosibirsk.[4] Also, there are several awards and grants of his name for students and scientists. Valentin Koptyug was buried in Novosibirsk.