Paul Dyer Merica (March 17, 1889 – October 20, 1957) was an American metallurgist, president of the International Nickel Company of Canada Ltd., now Vale Limited,[1] inventor,[2] and recipient of the 1938 John Fritz Medal.[3]
After his graduation Merica was instructor in physics University of Wisconsin for a year, and teacher of "Western subjects" at the Chekiang Provincial College at Hangzhou, China for another two years. From 1910 to 1914 he continued his studies at the University of Berlin, where he obtained his PhD in 1914.[3]
Career and acknowledgement
After graduation back in the States he was research physicist at the United States Bureau of Standards for five years.[4] In 1919 he moved into the industry to the International Nickel Company, where he developed the first of the Inconel alloys (Inconel 600) to protect the nickel cookware market against competition by stainless steel. He started as Director research, and worked his way up to Technical assistant to president in 1929, and furthermore to executive vice president, president and director[3] from 1951 until his retirement in 1955.[4]
On October 29, 1964, the International Nickel Company dedicated a new research center, called the Paul D. Merica Research Laboratory, in Sterling Forest, New York.[6]
Publications
Paul Dyer Merica. Ueber Beziehungen zwischen den mechanischen und den magnetischen Eigenschaften einiger Metalle bei elastischen und plastischen Formänderungen, 1914.
George Kimball Burgess, Paul Dyer Merica. An investigation of fusible tin boiler plugs, 1915.
Paul Dyer Merica. A simplification of the inverse-rate method for thermal analysis, 1919.
Paul Dyer Merica, Romaine George Waltenberg. Malleability and metallography of nickel, 1925.
Paul Dyer Merica. "Personalities in Industry," Scientific American. July 1, 1938.
Paul Dyer Merica. Charles Holmes Herty, Jr., 1896-1953, 1958.