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Martin, Archer John Porter (1910-2002)| English biochemist who shared the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1952 for work with Richard Synge on partition chromatography in 1944. |
| Martin was born in London and studied at Cambridge. He has held both commercial and academic research posts; he worked at the Wool Industries Research Association in Leeds 1938-46, at the National Institute for Medical Research 1952-59, was director of the Abbotsbury Laboratory 1959-70, and taught at the University of Sussex 1973-78. |
| Martin and Synge began the development of partition chromatography in 1941, for separating the components of complex mixtures. A drop of the solution to be analysed is placed at one end of a strip of filter paper and allowed to dry. That end of the strip is then immersed in a solvent, which deposits the various components of the mixture as it permeates the strip of paper. The dried strip is sprayed with a reagent that produces a colour change with the components; Martin and Synge used ninhydrin to reveal the positions of amino acids. The developed strip is called a chromatogram. |
| In 1953, Martin began working on gas chromatography, which separates chemical vapours by differential adsorption on a porous solid. |
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