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  1. To Charles Hatchett (1765---1847), a self-educated scientist and first class analytical chemist, we owe the discovery of niobium, the analysis of a series of important minerals and animal substances such as shells, bones, dental enamel, a detailed study of bitumens, the separation of an artificial tanning material from mineral and animal sources.

  2. Changing Horses to a Post-Chaise outside the ‘George’ Posting-house, Charles Cooper Henderson. Painted c.1830-1840. Courtesy of the Tate Gallery. Image released under Creative Commons CC-BY-NC-ND (3.0 Unported). Charles Hatchett (1765-1847), an accomplished scientist, credited with the discovery of the element

  3. To Charles Hatchett (1765---1847), a self-educated scientist and first class analytical chemist, we owe the discovery of niobium, the analysis of a series of important minerals and animal substances such as shells, bones, dental enamel, a detailed study of bitumens, the separation of an artificial tanning material from mineral and animal sources.

  4. The winning paper of the 2022 Charles Hatchett Award demonstrates how niobium can contribute to the potential development of better performing cathode-materials in next-generation lithium-ion batteries. For the best paper on the science and technology of niobium-based materials, the 2022 Charles Hatchett winners are Fengxia Xin, Hui Zhou, Yanxu ...

  5. 2021 Charles Hatchett Award's winning publication has provided a general design strategy of constructing nanoscale structural and polar heterogeneity for improving the piezoelectric performance of Niobium-based materials. For the best paper on the science and technology of niobium-based materials, the 2021 Charles Hatchett winners are Huajun ...

  6. 查理斯·哈契特(英語: Charles Hatchett ,1765年1月2日-1847年3月10日),生於英國 倫敦,英國化學家,其最重要的成就是發現了鈮元素。 鈳鐵礦. 1801年,在倫敦大英博物館工作的查理斯·哈契特對博物館收藏的一份鈳鐵礦(Columbite)進行了分析。

  7. When Sir Charles Hatchett was born in 1640, in London, England, his father, John Hatchett, Jr., was 20 and his mother, Anne Basse, was 16. He married Lady Mary of Shoreditch Nicholas in 1662, in Middlesex, England, United Kingdom. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 3 daughters.