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had given any attention to the preparation of dyestuffs and was asked to take the position of the managing chief chemist to start the works of company, - the Japan
Dyestuff Manufacturing Company. In view of the extraordinary circumstances, he consented to do so in spite of the impaired eyesight under which he was suffering. Thus was inaugurated the manufacturing of the dyestuffs on a large scale, one of the most ambitious projects that Japan had ever undertaken in competition with the West.
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150:, it was producing to supply about 700,000 c. ft. per day of gas. As a director, he was responsible for the extensions up to the several millions c. ft. a day. With the Osaka Seimi Works Company a similar growth took place and he was responsible for the works development from one battery to three batteries, from 16 to 73 ovens, from 600 tons of coke to 6000 tons per month.
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In the year 1909 he determined to devote the surplus gas of the by-product ovens of the Seimi Works of two companies, the Osaka Gas and the Seimi, and by means of a compressor which had been used for riveting a gas-holder, about 200,00 c. ft. were sent out daily under high pressure. This is regarded
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The importance of subjecting railway sleepers to some preserving process was insisted on by Dr. Shiga, and a company was formed to use creosote oil mixed with Zinc compound; but owing to the lack of tar oil, the enterprise was in a precarious condition, when Dr. Shimomura was enabled to put a large
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from coke-oven gas, when it was thought that it would not sell. This fear was subsequently contradicted by increased demand for benzene as solvent, motor oil and also an important raw material for dyestuffs. In the time of the world war, Japan was amply provided with benzene obtained from coke-oven
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In his travels abroad, besides investigating coke-ovens, he took every opportunity to get a glimpse of the dyestuffs works and was favored with rare chances of inspecting inside of some works in
England. When the world war broke out, he was found to be one of the very few among native chemists who
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He erected the first by-product ovens in Japan, and when built and started, the enterprise was considered to be a reckless endeavor. But gradually the number of ovens has increased and there were more than a thousand coke-ovens of by-product type. This method of blending was adopted by all the
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on a large scale in quality and hardness equal to best
English and German coke by suitable blending of materials and suitable method of heating, which eventually superseded the foreign articles entire
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in Kyoto and served as professor of chemistry from 1889 to 1896. He was also a trustee of the college and was twice elected as honorary president.
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to its use, resulting in the formation of the Toyo Wood
Preserving Company. The wood preserving business has steadily developed.
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as the first attempt in Japan to use the high-pressure conveyance, the method since then becoming so prevalent in this country,
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was engaged. In 1876, he was studying theology in
Doshisha. He went to America in 1885 when 25 years of age, and he entered the
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in
Japanese soils was not very well recognized. He was not an expert in tar distillation and was among the first to produce
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was a
Japanese chemical engineer known for many famous inventions. He coined the term for chemical engineering,
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to produce it on a large scale and put it on the market as a fertilizer in the days when its superiority to
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in powder, balls and cakes at a time when its smell was objected to as something unbearable.
69:. When about 12 years of age, he attended the Kumamoto Yogakko where American soldier Capt.
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Shimomura was born in
Kumamoto, the eldest son in a samurai family, shortly before the
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gas to make the manufacture of dyestuffs independent of foreign supply.
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The sixth honorary president of
Doshisha University (1904 - 1907)
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Shimomura was the organizer of the Harris School of
Science at
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Social Service: A Review of Social and Industrial Betterment
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81:where he worked in organic chemistry under Prof.
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224:Managing Director and Chief Engineer (1905-1923)
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360:. League for Social Service. 1902. p. 89.
133:He was the first to put up a plant to extract
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118:Shimomura was one of the earliest workers on
317:. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 143–144.
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338:Chemical Society of Great Britain (1939).
114:Ammonium sulphate, naphthalene and benzene
85:. He also obtained practical technique of
146:When Dr. Shimomura became connected with
264:Chairman of the Board of Directors(1924)
77:. He took the degree of B.S. He went to
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252:Toyo (Oriental) Wood Preserving Company
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102:Dr. Shimomura was the first to produce
398:Worcester Polytechnic Institute alumni
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311:Hollister-Short, Graham (2016-09-30).
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40:, October 29, 1861 – October 21, 1937)
280:Japan Dyestuff Manufacturing Company
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290:Managing Chief Chemist (1916-1918)
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341:Journal of the Chemical Society
314:History of Technology Volume 22
238:Consulting Engineer (1905-1907)
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75:Worcester Polytechnic Institute
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98:Coke-oven and Coke manufacture
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258:Technical Adviser (1907-1918)
247:Managing Director (1926-1928)
20:Portrait of Kotaro Shimomura
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393:Japanese chemical engineers
344:. The Society. p. 220.
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241:Chief Engineer (1907-1916)
221:Chief Engineer (1899-1907)
110:subsequent manufacturers.
211:Osaka Seimi Works Company
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293:Technical Advisor (1918)
275:Technical Advisor (1910)
158:Wood preserving industry
79:Johns Hopkins University
61:Early life and education
282:(amalgamation with the
213:(amalgamation with the
57:, in Japanese in 1909.
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378:Japanese scientists
200:Doshisha University
189:Doshisha University
183:Doshisha University
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324:978-1-350-01893-8
284:Sumitomo Chemical
232:Osaka Gas Company
148:Osaka Gas Company
120:ammonium sulphate
67:Meiji Restoration
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269:Kobe Gas Company
227:President (1923)
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37:Shimomura Kōtarō
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25:Kotaro Shimomura
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261:Director (1918)
244:Director (1919)
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165:creosote oil
163:quantity of
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142:Gas industry
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388:1937 deaths
383:1861 births
174:manufacture
128:naphthalene
71:L. L. James
372:Categories
298:References
217:Company):
83:Ira Remsen
215:Osaka Gas
172:Dyestuff
135:benzene
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93:Career
87:Solvay
31:下村 孝太郎
319:ISBN
104:coke
52:化学工学
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