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Professor Emeritus
Kieth Smith
Born (1947-01-15) January 15, 1947 (age 77)
NationalityBritish
Alma materManchester University
Awards
Swansea University Head of Chemistry Department
In office
1990–1993
Preceded byAndrew Pelter
Succeeded byDai Games
In office
2001–2017
Preceded byDai Games
Succeeded byOwen Guy
Scientific career
FieldsBoron chemistry
InstitutionsSwansea University, Cardiff University
Thesis (1971)
Academic advisorsAndrew Pelter

Keith Smith FRSC FLSW is an academic and British organic chemist.[1]

Life[edit]

Smith was born on 15 January 1947 in Walsall, England but grew up in Brown Edge, North Staffordshire. He attended the Leek High School, before gaining a scholarship to study Chemistry at Manchester University where he went on to achieve a BSc with First Class Honors in 1968. Smith received an MSc in 1969 and a PhD in 1971 in the field of born chemistry working under the supervision of Dr Andrew Pelter. In August 1968, Smith married Lynn who he met during his time at high school.

Career[edit]

Keith received a Royal Society European Exchange Fellowship to take up a postdoctoral research position with Professor Albert Eschenmoser at the ETH in Zürich, Switzerland.[1] In 1971, he became a lecturer at University College of Swansea where his old supervisor Professor Andrew Pelter had recently taken up his Chair of Organic Chemistry. Kieth spent a sabbatical year (1978-79) collaborating with H C Brown at Purdue University, USA. Smith quickly gained promotion becoming Professor at Swansea in 1988, and also became Head of the Department of Chemistry in 1990-93 and again in 2001-2007. Smith was vocal in criticizing the decision by Swansea University's council to phase out undergraduate chemistry teaching at the institution, a decision that was reversed in 2017.[2][3] In 2007, Smith moved to Cardiff University as Professor of Organic Chemistry until his formal retirement in 2013.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Wales, The Learned Society of. "Keith Smith". The Learned Society of Wales. Retrieved 2023-06-12.
  2. ^ WalesOnline (2004-04-19). "Professor criticises scrapping of course". WalesOnline. Retrieved 2023-06-12.
  3. ^ Stoye2017-09-22T09:00:00+01:00, Emma. "Swansea's re-opened chemistry department welcomes first undergraduates". Chemistry World. Retrieved 2023-06-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)

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