Nils Gustaf Dalén The Nobel Prize in Physics 1911

biography


Nobelpristagare
As an agriculture student, Dalén appeared ready to follow his father into farming. However, at school he designed and constructed several improved variations of farm equipment, prompting a businessman to encourage him to pursue a technical education. After graduating with a degree in mechanical engineering, Dalén joined the Swedish Carbide and Acetylene Company as technical chief in 1901. This company was working on a way to improve a device called a gas accumulator, used to produce a safe and effective fuel for the illumination of lighthouses and buoys. It was comprised of acetylene (a hydrocarbon gas that burns with an extremely bright, white light), acetone (a highly flammable organic liquid), a porous mass used to absorb the solution of acetylene and acetone, and a metallic container. The problem was that no porous mass had yet been manufactured that adequately absorbed the acetylene gas. For that reason the gas tended to accumulate, creating the possibility of an explosion.
År 1912 blev Dalén svårt brännskadad och miste synen vid en gasexplosion. Han återvände som blind till chefsposten på AGA och fortsatte med uppfinnarverksamhet. Det var under sjukdomsperioden som meddelandet om nobelpriset kom. Det har mycket diskuterats, om detta pris är i överensstämmelse med Nobels testamente "till den som gjort mänskligheten den största nyttan". Säkerligen har dock Daléns fyrbelysningar, spridda över all världens farleder, åstadkommit mer direkt påvisbar nytta, för säkerheten till sjöss, än många vetenskapliga rön, som belönats med nobelpris. Daléns okuvliga energi och livsvilja fortsatte hela livet ut och likaså hans tillgivenhet för Chalmers. Vid AGA anställdes till en början bara chalmersingenjörer och inom företaget startade Dalén, 1917, den första lokalavdelningen av Chalmersska ingenjörsföreningen, Stockholms-avdelningen. Magnus Storchs levnadsteckning är mycket läsvärd, även om Dalén dog fem år före Storchs födelse Nils Gustaf Dalén was born at Stenstorp in Skaraborg, Sweden on November 30, 1869, the son of a farmer. After his preliminary education, he entered a School of Agriculture to study dairy farming but he was later advised by Gustaf de Laval, who recognized his natural gift for mechanics, to seek a technical education. He prepared himself for the Chalmers Institute at Gothenburg and gained admission in 1892. He graduated as an engineer in 1896 and spent a year in Switzerland, studying under Professor Stodola at the Eidgenössisches Polytechnikum. On his return to Sweden, Dalén carried out some research at Gothenburg and set up as a consulting engineer. He became Technical Chief of the Svenska Karbid- och Acetylen A.B. (Swedish Carbide and Acetylene, Ltd.) in 1901 and he later joined the Gas Accumulator Company where he became Chief Engineer in 1906. In 1909, the company was reorganized as Svenska Aktiebolaget Gasaccumulator (AGA) (Swedish Gas Accumulator Ltd.) with Dalén as Managing Director. Dalén's inventiveness first showed in his early days on his father's farm when he built a threshing machine powered by an old spinning wheel. He contrived a device to indicate the butterfat content of milk and thereby made his contact with de Laval. On completion of his advanced education, he worked on the construction of a hot-air turbine and related air compressors and pumps. He also invented a pasteurization apparatus and a milking machine.

In 1901, Dalén's company purchased the patent rights of the French invention of dissolved acetylene and he began his work on automatic flashing beacons for lighthouses. His subsequent invention of the sun-valve, which causes a beacon to light automatically at dusk and extinguish itself at dawn, enabled lighthouses to function perfectly and unattended for periods of up to a year. His invention of cylinder filled with a porous mass of asbestos and diatomaceous earth for storage of acetylene reduced considerably the hazards in handling this material and its use in welding became safe. He also invented a mixer for providing a constant and correct balance of gas and air for use in the incandescent mantle and a device for removing broken mantles and replacing them by new ones.

In 1912, whilst testing safety devices on cylinders of acetylene in an outdoor location, and when satisfactory safety precautions had been taken, a sudden explosion seriously injured Dalén and caused the loss of his eyesight. He recovered from his other injuries and overcoming his great incapacity, continued his researches. He was awarded the contract for lighting the Panama Canal and later turned to the field of thermal technics to invent a stove, now in universal use, which maintains cooking heat for 24 hours using only eight pounds of coal. Dalén's writings were few, but he left his mark in a practical way by the provision of light, and therefore safety, for the benefit of travellers by land, sea and air.

Amongst the many distinctions conferred upon Dalén are membership of the Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences, 1913, and the Academy of Science and Engineering, 1919. He was made Honorary Doctor of Lund University in 1918 and received the Morehead Medal of the International Acetylene Association. He took part in debates at the National Society of Economics and served on the Lidingö City Council for almost twenty years. Dalén married Elma Persson in 1901. They had two sons and two daughters. Their eldest son, Gunnar, qualified as an engineer and followed his father as a Director of AGA; their younger son, Anders, became a Doctor of Medicine; Gustaf's brother Albin, a famous ophthalmologist, was a Professor at the Caroline Institute. Dalén died on December 9, 1937, in his villa at Lidingö.