August Bültemann

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Ernst Friedrich August Bültemann (born November 7, 1877 in Uelzen , † April 10, 1943 in Potsdam ) was a German engineer . In 1927 he founded the Dielectric Institute based on the Dresden University of Technology .

Life

He was the son of the ironworks owner Carl Bültemann from Uelzen and his wife Linna nee Neumann, whose ancestors were farm farmers and master craftsmen. After attending the Realgymnasium, where he passed the Abitur, August Bültemann studied at the Technical University of Hanover from 1899 to 1903 and then moved to the Kingdom of Saxony at the Technical University of Dresden. There he received his doctorate in 1904 as a Dr. He stayed in Dresden and became an assistant at the Institute for Electrical and Physical Chemistry at the Technical University. As a student he had already worked on practical processes for the production of electrical insulation material, which he later published several times. In Weesenstein in the Eastern Ore Mountainshe later took over the management of the company Rhadoonit-Werke. He then set up a private laboratory for chemical-technical insulation research and founded the Dresden Dielectric Institute in 1927.

In Dresden he lived at Sedanstrasse 2 in the old town.

August Bültemann died on April 10, 1943 at the age of 67 in the Potsdam villa colony in Neubabelsberg .

Fonts (selection)

  • Electrical engineering insulating materials. Lecture . In: Association communications of the Dresden District Association of German Engineers and the Dresden Electrotechnical Association, EH Meyer, Dresden 1917.
  • From the electrical insulating materials industry. Lecture given on Nov. 1, 1921 . Verlag Chemie, Leipzig undated [1921].
  • Dielectric material. Influence of the electric field, properties, testing, manufacture . Julius Springer, Berlin 1926.
  • Chemical-technological work in the Dresden Dielectric Institute . In: Elektrotechnische Zeitschrift 51 (1930); No. 1, pp. 629-630.

family

He married Käthe (* 1892), the daughter of the master goldsmith and jeweler Max Schintke from Stettin . The marriage produced three sons, one of whom died in World War II.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Elektrotechnische Zeitschrift , supplements, Volume 64, 1943, p. 409.