Elmer L. Gaden Scientist

Elmer L. Gaden Jr. has been described as the “father of biochemical engineering." A graduate of Columbia University, he wrote a groundbreaking dissertation that quantified the amount of oxygen necessary to fuel the fermentation process used to produce penicillin. Dr. Gaden established Columbia's program in biochemical engineering. He remained at Columbia for 26 years as a teacher, researcher, and department chair, before becoming dean of the College of Engineering, Mathematics, and Business Administration at the University of Vermont in 1974. In 1979, he joined the engineering faculty at the University of Virginia as the Wills Johnson Professor of Chemical Engineering. In 1994 he retired from Virginia, becoming Wills Johnson Professor Emeritus.

Personal facts

Birth dateSeptember 23, 1923
Birth place
Brooklyn
Nationality
United States
Date of deathMarch 10, 2012
Education
New York University Polytechnic School of Engineering
Columbia School of Engineering and Applied Science
Known for
Biochemical engineering

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