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Klaus Clusius : ウィキペディア英語版 | Klaus Clusius
| footnotes = }} Klaus Paul Alfred Clusius (19 March 1903 – 28 May 1963) was a German physical chemist from Breslau (Wrocław), Silesia. During World War II, he worked on the German nuclear energy project, also known as the Uranium Club; he worked on isotope separation techniques and heavy water production. After the war, he was a professor of physical chemistry at the University of Zurich. He died in Zurich. ==Education==
Clusius studied at the ''Technische Hochschule Breslau'' (today, the Wrocław University of Technology) from 1922 to 1926. He received his doctorate in 1926, under Arnold Eucken, who was the director of the physicochemical institute there; his thesis was on the specific heat of solids at low temperatures. From 1926 to 1929, he was Eucken’s teaching assistant. From 1929 to 1930, under a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship, he did postdoctoral studies and research at the University of Oxford, with Cyril Norman Hinshelwood, and at the Leiden University. He completed his Habilitation, in 1931, at the ''Georg-August-Universität Göttingen'' under Eucken, who had been the director of the physicochemical institute there since 1929. He then became Eucken’s teaching assistant.〔Hentschel and Hentschel, 1996, Appendix F; see the entry for Clusius.〕〔(Arnold Eucken ) - Directors of the old Göttingen physicochemical institute (1895–1971).〕〔(Klaus Clusius ) – Marcel Benoist Stiftung.〕
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