Be sure the subject meets Wikipedia's inclusion criteria. For scientific terms to be included in Wikipedia, they should be sourced to a textbook or academic publication; try searching
Google Books,
PubMed, and
Google Scholar.
Also, when adding a request, please include as much information as possible (such as webpages, articles, or other reference material) so editors can find and distinguish your request from an already-created article.
Caroline Karason - Cosmetic Scientist, Teacher and now Musician (Red Charcoal)
[10] Graduate of the London College of Fashion
[11][12], University of the Arts London
[13][14]. In 2010, she invented of the first ever Veet™
[15][16] Depilatory Gel (sensitive variant)
[17][18] while working at the Reckitt Benckiser Group plc (previously known as 'Reckitt and Coleman' and 'Reckitt and Sons' but now known as 'Reckitt')
[19][20][21] but was never publicly credited for it or listed on the patents arising from it
[22][23][24][25]
Chris Broka, (BS, Caltech; Ph.D., UCSD; Postdoc, Harvard) - retired synthetic pharmaceutical chemist who holds dozens of patents that are used to treat various diseases. Since his retirement from chemistry, he has been working in the fields of theoretical physics, quantum mechanics and music.
[26];
[27];
[28];
[29];
[30];
[31];
[32];
[33]
Michael T. Beachem, Jr., Ph.D. (req. pre-2012-01-17) – one of the four chemists that invented the
lightstick while he worked at
American Cyanamid; he was also a holder of twenty-one patents of other inventions
J. Thomas Brenna (req. 2021-01-04) - Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Texas at Austin who uses stable isotope mass spectrometry and other bioanalytical chemical techniques to investigate human nutrition and diseases associated with nutrition.
[34];
[35];
[36];
[37];
[38];
[39]
Neil Burford famous Canadian chemist, former President of the CSC and Chair of CNC-IUPAC, well known for his contributions to the fields of phosphorus chemistry and main group cations (
[40],
[41])
Gary Fuller - British chemist and air pollution scientist
[42]. I think, fair to say, one of Britain's most prominent air pollution scientists, formerly at King's College, London. Notable for establishing and running the "London Air Quality Network"
[43]. Prolific media contributor/commentator and interviewee (regular column in The Guardian newspaper), many press/media interviews [search news.google.com for dr gary fuller], well-received book (Invisible Killer) about air pollution published in 2019.
Dennis William Hauck (req. prior 2012-05-19) – alchemist and prolific author on the subject.
Lutz Hecht (req. pre-2012-01-17) – physical chemist who, in collaboration with
Laurence Barron, developed one of the first backscattering ROA spectrometers
George Hess (1926–2015) (req. pre-2017-01-06)—biochemist, Fulbright Scholar, Guggenheim Fellow, NIH Fogarty Scholar; member of the Biochemistry department at Cornell University.[1]
Angar Olds (req. 2014-11-03) - is a pioneer in the field of
chemometrics and formerly an associate professor at the Technical University of Denmark. He was awarded the Herman Wold gold medal for his contribution to chemometrics in 1997
William S. Rapson (req. pre-2012-01-17) – found the Rapson-Robinson synthesis, student of Sir
Robert Robinson Later wrote the book Gold Usage, see Appreciation: Dr William S Rapson in Gold Usage 01 December 1999, by Prof Dr C J Raub)
Jan H. Teuben (req. pre-2012-01-17) – who?; alleged chemist
Grant Venerable, II (req. 2021-11-13), physical chemist (BS UCLA, MS & PhD University of Chicago), artist, musician, author, university administrator. Son of
Grant Venerable, a mathematician-civil engineer and the first African-American graduate of Caltech (his father also deserves his own article and not lumped together with his son). Doctoral student of
Jack Halpern (chemist).
[54];
[55];
[56];
[57];
[58];
[59];
[60];
[61];
[62]
Mark Volpin (req. 2021-08-14) – Soviet organical chemist, winner of the USSR State Prize in 1982. Besides the Russian article, there is one on the German Wikipedia ("Mark Wolpin") based on two English-language sources.
Herwig von Zwehl (req. 2015-04-10), Technical Director of ICMESA (Assumed Deceased)
[63]
Chuanlun Zhang (req. 2019-04-30) – An American-trained Chinese Biogeochemist and Geomicrobiologist who had worked at many research facilities in both the United States (NASA, ORNL, UGA, Texas A&M) and China (Southern University of Science and Technology) and is an expert on Archaea. He has authored or co-authored nearly 300 high-impact papers.
[64];
[65];
[66];
[67];
[68];
[69];
[70];
[71]];
[72];
[73];
[74];
[75]
Yvan Guindon (req. 20233-01-01) Canadian chemist who was President of the
Royal Society of Canada from 2007-09. Various awards include the National Order of Quebec and the Order of Canada
[76];
[77];
[78]
Actilift (2012-07-15) (is claimed to be a "smart" enzyme in laundry detergents that can smoothen fabrics, does somebody know what kind of enzyme it exactly is and what it does chemically?
Possibly a
cellulase, to digest microfibrils of cellulose off the surface of cotton threads, giving a smoother feeling surface: linked page mentions such a use, but manufacturers don't say what's in their trademarked product....
Malcolm Farmer (
talk) 14:37, 10 February 2013 (UTC))reply
Bioapatite (req. pre-2012-01-16) – has received a number of recent mentions in the scientific and popular press, but information about where it exists, how it forms, and its relation to other bone and tooth compounds is not readily available.
Nitrosomethane This compound is distinct from Nitromethane, and has chemical formula CH3NO, similar to formaalmide and oxaziridine, but is distinct in the connection of its atoms.
Cartoon diagram - Many wiki articles have pictures of biologically significant molecules identified as "cartoon diagrams" but the term (or art) is not identified anywhere. It would be helpful to have an article about this subject.
Cerakote - a trade name held by NIC Industries for a type of polyceramic coating containing both polymeric and ceramic components. Mentioned in other Wikipedia (English) articles about firearm coatings and finishes. It has other applications, e.g. for coating headers and exhaust manifolds.
Exciton diffusion (there are multiple sources encompassing types of exciton diffusion, but nothing as a whole (See Forster Resonance Energy Transfer, Dexter Electron Transfer etc.). Also the definition is a bit hairy and often the term is tossed around loosely, it would be nice to put all of that together)
Be sure the subject meets Wikipedia's inclusion criteria. For scientific terms to be included in Wikipedia, they should be sourced to a textbook or academic publication; try searching
Google Books,
PubMed, and
Google Scholar.
Also, when adding a request, please include as much information as possible (such as webpages, articles, or other reference material) so editors can find and distinguish your request from an already-created article.
Caroline Karason - Cosmetic Scientist, Teacher and now Musician (Red Charcoal)
[10] Graduate of the London College of Fashion
[11][12], University of the Arts London
[13][14]. In 2010, she invented of the first ever Veet™
[15][16] Depilatory Gel (sensitive variant)
[17][18] while working at the Reckitt Benckiser Group plc (previously known as 'Reckitt and Coleman' and 'Reckitt and Sons' but now known as 'Reckitt')
[19][20][21] but was never publicly credited for it or listed on the patents arising from it
[22][23][24][25]
Chris Broka, (BS, Caltech; Ph.D., UCSD; Postdoc, Harvard) - retired synthetic pharmaceutical chemist who holds dozens of patents that are used to treat various diseases. Since his retirement from chemistry, he has been working in the fields of theoretical physics, quantum mechanics and music.
[26];
[27];
[28];
[29];
[30];
[31];
[32];
[33]
Michael T. Beachem, Jr., Ph.D. (req. pre-2012-01-17) – one of the four chemists that invented the
lightstick while he worked at
American Cyanamid; he was also a holder of twenty-one patents of other inventions
J. Thomas Brenna (req. 2021-01-04) - Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Texas at Austin who uses stable isotope mass spectrometry and other bioanalytical chemical techniques to investigate human nutrition and diseases associated with nutrition.
[34];
[35];
[36];
[37];
[38];
[39]
Neil Burford famous Canadian chemist, former President of the CSC and Chair of CNC-IUPAC, well known for his contributions to the fields of phosphorus chemistry and main group cations (
[40],
[41])
Gary Fuller - British chemist and air pollution scientist
[42]. I think, fair to say, one of Britain's most prominent air pollution scientists, formerly at King's College, London. Notable for establishing and running the "London Air Quality Network"
[43]. Prolific media contributor/commentator and interviewee (regular column in The Guardian newspaper), many press/media interviews [search news.google.com for dr gary fuller], well-received book (Invisible Killer) about air pollution published in 2019.
Dennis William Hauck (req. prior 2012-05-19) – alchemist and prolific author on the subject.
Lutz Hecht (req. pre-2012-01-17) – physical chemist who, in collaboration with
Laurence Barron, developed one of the first backscattering ROA spectrometers
George Hess (1926–2015) (req. pre-2017-01-06)—biochemist, Fulbright Scholar, Guggenheim Fellow, NIH Fogarty Scholar; member of the Biochemistry department at Cornell University.[1]
Angar Olds (req. 2014-11-03) - is a pioneer in the field of
chemometrics and formerly an associate professor at the Technical University of Denmark. He was awarded the Herman Wold gold medal for his contribution to chemometrics in 1997
William S. Rapson (req. pre-2012-01-17) – found the Rapson-Robinson synthesis, student of Sir
Robert Robinson Later wrote the book Gold Usage, see Appreciation: Dr William S Rapson in Gold Usage 01 December 1999, by Prof Dr C J Raub)
Jan H. Teuben (req. pre-2012-01-17) – who?; alleged chemist
Grant Venerable, II (req. 2021-11-13), physical chemist (BS UCLA, MS & PhD University of Chicago), artist, musician, author, university administrator. Son of
Grant Venerable, a mathematician-civil engineer and the first African-American graduate of Caltech (his father also deserves his own article and not lumped together with his son). Doctoral student of
Jack Halpern (chemist).
[54];
[55];
[56];
[57];
[58];
[59];
[60];
[61];
[62]
Mark Volpin (req. 2021-08-14) – Soviet organical chemist, winner of the USSR State Prize in 1982. Besides the Russian article, there is one on the German Wikipedia ("Mark Wolpin") based on two English-language sources.
Herwig von Zwehl (req. 2015-04-10), Technical Director of ICMESA (Assumed Deceased)
[63]
Chuanlun Zhang (req. 2019-04-30) – An American-trained Chinese Biogeochemist and Geomicrobiologist who had worked at many research facilities in both the United States (NASA, ORNL, UGA, Texas A&M) and China (Southern University of Science and Technology) and is an expert on Archaea. He has authored or co-authored nearly 300 high-impact papers.
[64];
[65];
[66];
[67];
[68];
[69];
[70];
[71]];
[72];
[73];
[74];
[75]
Yvan Guindon (req. 20233-01-01) Canadian chemist who was President of the
Royal Society of Canada from 2007-09. Various awards include the National Order of Quebec and the Order of Canada
[76];
[77];
[78]
Actilift (2012-07-15) (is claimed to be a "smart" enzyme in laundry detergents that can smoothen fabrics, does somebody know what kind of enzyme it exactly is and what it does chemically?
Possibly a
cellulase, to digest microfibrils of cellulose off the surface of cotton threads, giving a smoother feeling surface: linked page mentions such a use, but manufacturers don't say what's in their trademarked product....
Malcolm Farmer (
talk) 14:37, 10 February 2013 (UTC))reply
Bioapatite (req. pre-2012-01-16) – has received a number of recent mentions in the scientific and popular press, but information about where it exists, how it forms, and its relation to other bone and tooth compounds is not readily available.
Nitrosomethane This compound is distinct from Nitromethane, and has chemical formula CH3NO, similar to formaalmide and oxaziridine, but is distinct in the connection of its atoms.
Cartoon diagram - Many wiki articles have pictures of biologically significant molecules identified as "cartoon diagrams" but the term (or art) is not identified anywhere. It would be helpful to have an article about this subject.
Cerakote - a trade name held by NIC Industries for a type of polyceramic coating containing both polymeric and ceramic components. Mentioned in other Wikipedia (English) articles about firearm coatings and finishes. It has other applications, e.g. for coating headers and exhaust manifolds.
Exciton diffusion (there are multiple sources encompassing types of exciton diffusion, but nothing as a whole (See Forster Resonance Energy Transfer, Dexter Electron Transfer etc.). Also the definition is a bit hairy and often the term is tossed around loosely, it would be nice to put all of that together)