Victor L. Talrose | |
---|---|
Victor Lvovich Talrose
|
|
Born |
Tula, Russia |
April 15, 1922
Died | June 22, 2004 Novato, California |
(aged 82)
Fields |
Radical chemistry Mass spectrometry |
Education | Moscow State University |
Thesis | Ion-molecule reactions in gases (1962) |
Known for | Radical chemistry Mass spectrometry Chemical ionization |
Notable awards | Bourke Award (1963) USSR Academy of Science (1968) Lenin Prize Thomson Medal (2003) |
Victor Lvovich Talrose (Russian: Виктор Львович Тальрозе, April 15, 1922 – June 22, 2004) was a Russian scientist and mass spectrometrist. He was known as the “Father of Russian Mass Spectrometry” and was the author of 440 articles and 6 monographs.
Victor Talrose was born in Tula, Russia, an industrial city on the Upa River 200 kilometers (120 mi) south of Moscow. He was the son of a medical doctor. He graduated from high school in 1939 with a gold medal for outstanding abilities.
He started his studies in chemistry at Moscow State University, but his studies were interrupted by the outbreak of World War II. Talrose served in the Soviet Army and was wounded and hospitalized three times. He returned to his studies in 1945, graduating in 1947.
He began work on his master's degree in the Laboratory of Elementary Processes headed by Viktor Kondrat’ev. His thesis was on the role of the hydroperoxyl radical in gas phase reactions of reaction of hydrogen and oxygen.
He became junior researcher at the Institute of Chemical Physics in Kondratyev lab, but was transferred to work on development of the Soviet atomic bomb project.
Talrose returned to Kondratyev lab after completion his work on the atomic bomb. He built the first Soviet mass spectrometer to study ion chemistry and in 1952 completed his Ph.D. thesis entitled ‘‘Secondary processes accompanying ionization of hydrocarbons and water in the ion sources of mass spectrometers.” He proposed that the ion at ‘’m/z’’ 17 was the hypervalent ion methanium, CH5+. This assignment was supported by accurate mass measurement and formed the basis for the later development of chemical ionization
From 1953 to 1956, Talrose worked on atomic weapons, then returned to the Kondratyev lab where headed a mass spectrometry group. He developed first Soviet gas chromatography–mass spectrometry and used it for some of the first use of selected ion monitoring for selective compound detection. He also developed gas phase ion chemistry bracketing techniques for determining proton affinity.