Kotaro Shimomura

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Portrait of Kotaro Shimomura

Kotaro Shimomura (下村 孝太郎, Shimomura Kōtarō; October 29, 1861 – October 21, 1937) was a Japanese chemical engineer known for many famous inventions. He coined the term for chemical engineering, kagaku-kōgaku (化学工学), in Japanese in 1909.[1]

Shimomura was born in Kumamoto, the eldest son in a samurai family, shortly before the Meiji Restoration.[2] When about 12 years of age, he attended the Kumamoto Yogakko where American soldier Capt. L. L. James 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 Worcester Polytechnic Institute. He took the degree of B.S. He went to Johns Hopkins University where he worked in organic chemistry under Prof. Ira Remsen. He also obtained practical technique of Solvay in Bruxelles.

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