William Froude
William Froude | |
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File:Williams Froude.jpeg
William Froude
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Born | 28 November 1810 Devon |
Died | 4 May 1879 Simonstown, South Africa |
Nationality | English |
Education | Westminster School |
Engineering career | |
Significant advance | Hydrodynamics , Froude number |
Significant awards | Royal Medal (1876) |
William Froude (/ˈfruːd/;[1] 28 November 1810 in Devon[2] – 4 May 1879 in Simonstown, South Africa) was an English engineer, hydrodynamicist and naval architect. He was the first to formulate reliable laws for the resistance that water offers to ships (such as the hull speed equation) and for predicting their stability.
Froude was born at Dartington, Devon, England, the son of Robert Froude, Archdeacon of Totnes and was educated at Westminster School and Oriel College, Oxford, graduating with a first in mathematics in 1832.
His first employment was as a surveyor on the South Eastern Railway which, in 1837, led to Brunel giving him responsibility for the construction of a section of the Bristol and Exeter Railway. It was here that he developed his empirical method of setting out track transition curves and introduced an alternative design to the helicoidal skew arch bridge at Rewe and Cowley Bridge Junction, near Exeter.[3][4]
At Brunel's invitation Froude turned his attention to the stability of ships in a seaway and his 1861 paper to the Institution of Naval Architects became influential in ship design. This led to a commission to identify the most efficient hull shape, which he was able to fulfil by reference to scale models: he established a formula (now known as the Froude number) by which the results of small-scale tests could be used to predict the behaviour of full-sized hulls. He built a sequence of 3, 6 and (shown in the picture) 12 foot scale models and used them in towing trials to establish resistance and scaling laws; Raven's sharp prow followed the "waveline" theory of John Scott Russell, but Swan's blunter profile proved to offer lower resistance. His experiments were vindicated in full-scale trials conducted by the Admiralty and as a result the first ship test tank was built, at public expense, at his home in Torquay. Here he was able to combine mathematical expertise with practical experimentation to such good effect that his methods are still followed today.
In 1877, he was commissioned by the Admiralty to produce a machine capable of absorbing and measuring the power of large naval engines. He invented and built the world's first water brake dynamometer, sometimes known as the hydraulic dynamometer, which led to the formation of Heenan & Froude Ltd in Birmingham.[5]
He died while on holiday (as an official guest of the Royal Navy) in Simonstown, South Africa, and was buried there with full naval honours. He was the brother of James Anthony Froude, a historian, and Hurrell Froude, writer and priest. William was married to the former Catherine Henrietta Elizabeth Holdsworth, daughter of Dartmouth Governor, mercantile magnate and member of Parliament Arthur Howe Holdsworth.
Notes
- ↑ Merriam Webster Online (for brother James Anthony Froude) [1]
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References
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to William Froude. |
- Biography of William Froude
- "Froude, William." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2007. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 29 April 2007.
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- Second Torquay honour for Naval architect William Froude. Herald Express, 26 December 2013.
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- Articles with dead external links from November 2012
- Use dmy dates from May 2012
- Use British English from May 2012
- Pages with broken file links
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- 1810 births
- 1879 deaths
- People educated at Westminster School, London
- Alumni of Oriel College, Oxford
- English engineers
- Naval architects
- Fellows of the Royal Society
- Royal Medal winners
- Fluid dynamicists
- People from Devon
- British expatriates in South Africa