175 KONOBEEVSKII 



Office: Institute of Chemical Physics of USSR Academy of 



Sciences 



Vorob'evskoye Shosse, 2 



Moscow, USSR 

 Residence: Leninskii Prospekt, 30 



Moscow, USSR 

 Telephone: B2 21 14 



KONOBEEVSKII, SERGEI TIKHONOVICH (Physicist) 



S. T. Konobeevskii was born April 26, 1890. In 1913 he 

 finished at Moscow University. From 1919-23, he taught at the 

 University of National Economy in Moscow. He worked, in 

 1923-1929, at the All-Union Technical Institute, and in 1929- 

 1941, at the State Institute of Dyed Metals. In 1926 he began 

 teaching at Moscow University where, in 1935, he became a 

 professor. In 1948 he started work at various institutions of 

 the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences. Since 1946 he has been a 

 Corresponding Member of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences. 

 In 1948 he became a member of the Communist Party of the 

 Soviet Union. 



Konobeevskii' s main work deals with X-ray -structural in- 

 vestigation of metals and alloys and their structural change dur- 

 ing plastic deformation, tempering, and phase transformations. 

 He developed a theory of aging of alloys, the decomposition of ■ 

 solid solutions, and the effect of radiation on materials. 

 Bibliography: 



Crystallization of metals during their conversion in a solid 

 state. Izvest. Akad. Nauk S.S.S.R., Ser. Khim., 1937, #5, 

 1909-1944. 



The theory of phase conversions, 1-3. Zhur. Exptl. i Teor. 

 Fiz. 1943, 13, #6, 11-12. 



Solid phases of a variable composition and basic consider- 

 ations of their structure. Bulletin of Physico-Chemical 

 Analysis, 1948, 16, #4. 



Effect of radiation on the structure and properties of sepa- 

 rating materials. Research in Geology, Chemistry and 

 Metallurgy. Moscow: 1955 (Report of the Soviet delegation 

 at the International Conference on the Peaceful Use of 

 Atomic Energy, Geneva, 1955). 



The nature of radiative disturbances in separating materials. 

 Atomic Energy, 1956, #2. 

 Office: Department of Physics 



Moscow University 

 Moscow, USSR 



