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Home > About the Academy > Biographical memoirs
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
Ian William Wark 1899-1985
By A.L.G. Rees
This memoir was originally published in Historical Records of Australian Science, vol.6, no.4, 1987.
Introduction
When Sir Ian William Wark
died on 20 April 1985, just 18 days before his 86th birthday,
Australia lost one of its most influential scientists. He was
born on 8 May 1899 at Spottiswood (now Spotswood), a Melbourne
surburb, the second child of William John and Florence Emily (née
Palmer) Wark. William John Wark (1868-1925) had been a student
at Glasgow Technical College and had won an engineering scholarship
to the University of Glasgow, but migration to Australia in 1884
with his widowed mother and younger brother had intervened. On
arrival in Australia he was employed in a firm of agricultural
implement makers, Hugh Lennon & Co, established by his mother's
brother-in-law. In 1894 he married Florence Emily Palmer, who
had however adopted her stepfather's name, Walton. Her husband
left the Lennon employ and became a sub-agent for a life insurance
company. This venture continued throughout his life with varied
success; it led to the family living for short periods in Spottiswood,
Hobart, South Melbourne, Sydney, Deepdene and Middle Park, and
to the need to supplement the income to provide the necessities
of life at a reasonable level. Ian Wark was the second child and
elder boy in a family of four, namely Jean, Ian, Margaret and
Donald. Donald studied agricultural science, carried out research
in plant genetics for CSIRO and was made a Fellow of the
Australian Institute of Agricultural Science for his work. Ian
Wark's mother (Mrs W.J. Wark) lived to 93 years of age.
Ian Wark married Elsie Evelyn Booth, one of his former students
from the University of Sydney, on 27 May 1927. Lady Wark died
during the preparation of this memoir on 29 January 1987 at the
age of 80 years. She is survived by a daughter, Elizabeth Helen
(Mrs K.W. Stedwell), and three grandchildren.
Early schooling and university career
Ian Wark, in his own words, 'took to school like a duck to water'
and in the first year of existence of the Melbourne Junior Technical
School found himself dux with an offer of a scholarship to the
Working Men's College (now RMIT). However, his father discussed
Ian' s future with a leading consulting chemist, and ultimately
Ian was enrolled at Scotch College. Although this was clearly
a burden on the family finances it enabled Wark to enjoy four
years at public school, where the influence of W.S. Littlejohn,
the headmaster, and W.R. Jamieson, undoubtedly the doyen of chemistry
masters of the period, encouraged his interest in and flair for
mathematics and science. He was dux of the school in his final
two years (1915/16). A major residential scholarship to Ormond
College and exhibitions acquired at the final public examinations
allowed him to live at Ormond College for the four years that
he was studying at the University of Melbourne. On advice from
various quarters, Wark entered first-year engineering, even though
he felt that science was more to his taste. Fortunately, a medical
problem that turned out to be transient rather than permanent
prompted the family doctor to propose a change to science. Competing
interests in mathematics, chemistry and physics proved more difficult
to resolve. The professors in each of these departments were distinguished
scholars and Wark was obtaining outstanding results in each subject.
After a little indecision the influence of Orme Masson,
the professor of chemistry of the day, won through, although J.H. Michell expressed his disappointment that a career in mathematics had
been passed up. Wark was almost financially independent throughout
his university career by winning exhibitions in many subjects.
It is an interesting commentary on the period that the better
students, who did not have the financial backing of affluent families,
cold-bloodedly planned courses to maximize the financial return
from exhibitions. In his first year he had to settle for shared
exhibitions with Frank Macfarlane Burnet,
later to become Nobel Laureate in medicine and President of the
Australian Academy of Science. A good scholarship at the end of
the third year (1919) allowed Wark to proceed to a fourth (MSc)
year and to his first research topic. Masson, who many years earlier
had studied several complex salts described as 'cupritartrates',
suggested a research topic in this field, which Wark and J. Packer
(later professor of chemistry in Christchurch, NZ) pursued jointly.
The successful completion of the Master's degree at the end of
1920 really marked the completion of the formal training available
for a career in science in Australia, since there was no PhD
degree in Australian universities at that time. Wark had been
outstandingly successful, although he had taken more than a passing
interest in sporting activities athletics, tennis, billiards and
in the countryside, in art, music, and literature. To someone
of lesser capabilities these would have constituted distractions
from the prosecution of a proper development of intellectual talents,
but this did not turn out to be the case. Throughout his life
Wark was almost insensitive to his surroundings when occupied
with something, whether it be a scientific or administrative problem,
writing, or lining up a golf shot. His powers of concentration
allowed him to make more efficient use of his time and talents
than most of us.
Post-graduate years
H.W. (later Sir Herbert) Gepp and A.C.D. (later Sir David) Rivett
had both been involved in munitions production during the First
World War in the UK and both had returned to Australia immediately
on the conclusion of hostilities. Gepp, who was a metallurgical
engineer without formal qualifications but with wide experience
in the chemical and metallurgical industries and in mining, had
been appointed general manager of the Electrolytic Zinc Company
of Australasia Ltd. Rivett had returned to his post as senior
lecturer in the Chemistry Department at the University of Melbourne
and recommended Wark on completion of his MSc for a position
in E.Z.'s South Melbourne laboratory. Gepp assigned to Wark a
research project on the roasting of zinc blende. Not long after
taking up these duties Orme Masson suggested that Wark apply for
an Exhibition of 1851 Science Research Scholarship. The application
was successful and Gepp released Wark without impediment. This
was not to be the end of Wark's association with the E.Z. Co
and the mining industry; several years later Wark was to find
himself committed to a most fruitful period of scientific research
for the mining industry.
In 1919, in Cambridge, F.W. Aston had devised the first mass spectrograph
for study of the isotopic constitutions of the chemical elements.
Wark, on Masson's advice, elected to take his 1851 Exhibition
Scholarship at University College London, and to undertake research
in the infant field of mass spectrography under the distinguished
physical chemist F.G. Donnan. Essential equipment for this research,
to be provided by the firm Brunner, Mond and Co, failed to materialize
during Wark's two-year stay at University College so, as an extension
of his MSc research, he made initially a study of copper malic
acid complexes as a stop-gap and finally a study of a series of
copper hydroxy-acid complexes as the total research project. This
was a successful piece of research and established a long-standing
interest and activity in this field. It is highly probable that
this failure of Brunner, Mond & Co to supply the mass spectrographic
equipment changed the course of Wark's research career. As it
was, the essentially chemical rather than chemico-physical type
of scientific work became his field of endeavour.
In former days, rather more so than now, the overseas research
scholarship was the privilege of the very few outstanding students.
The experience not only provided a perspective for Australian
science (and one's own efforts) in the world scene, but gave the
fortunate recipient a breadth of interest and understanding of
world activity and affairs that had a dramatic influence on his
future. This was certainly so in Wark's case. He travelled in
Europe, took an active role in college sport and society activities,
attended meetings of relevant learned societies, developed his
cultural interests, took courses in physiology, German and eugenics,
and spent some weeks in W.H. Bragg's
X-ray laboratory as part of the broader educational process.
The 1851 Exhibition Commissioners granted Wark an extension of
his scholarship for a third year, which he had planned to spend
with H.R. Kruyt in Holland until a discussion with G.N. Lewis
diverted him to Berkeley, California. His work in Berkeley with
A. Olsen on ionization potentials of gases did not lead to publishable
results, but he made the most of his close association with thermodynamics
and low-temperature studies in Lewis's department and of his visits
to other parts of the USA during vacations.
On his return to Australia during 1924, Wark's preparation for
a career in the scientific field was complete. He was confronted
with a choice between a position in an established chemical consultant's
firm in Melbourne and a lectureship in the Chemistry Department
of the University of Sydney. He chose the latter, probably because
he saw his future in an academic environment. In those days the
inorganic and physical side of the Sydney chemistry department
boasted little by way of research activity, except for G.J. Burrows
who was working in the coordination chemistry field. Wark and
Burrows collaborated in work on the salicylic acid complexes of
aluminium. After a year in this position it was with some relief
that Wark accepted an offer from E.Z. Co Ltd to engage in full-time
research on its behalf in Melbourne, particularly as his father's
death during 1925 had created some new family responsibilities
for him as the elder son.
Wark's return to Melbourne really marks the start of his significant
scientific and professional career. His association with E.Z.
Co and later with a group of mining companies gave him the opportunity
to tackle several major technical problems in industry in an academic
environment and in a reasonably long-term scientific manner without
the pressures inherent in close associations with the production
plant, which inevitably leads to an ad hoc approach rather
than proper research investigation. It also gave him an insight
into and led to a life-long interest in the mining, metallurgical
and mineral industries. Coincidentally, it alerted Wark to the
major role that personal relationships and jealousies can play
in the conduct of professional and business activities. In fact,
the three years spent with the E.Z. Co (1926-29) were an invaluable
introduction to the real industrial world. H.W. Gepp, who was
general manager of E.Z. Co and located in Melbourne, appointed
Wark to act in a liaison capacity between Sir David Masson,
whom Gepp had retained as a consultant, and the research department
at E.Z.'s Risdon plant. Unfortunately, the general superintendent
of Risdon had not been consulted and Wark found himself, through
no fault of his own, the object of a rather unpleasant internal
dispute. The one propitious outcome of the dispute was that Gepp
established Wark and his assistants in a laboratory rented from
the Chemistry Department of the University of Melbourne, in which
environment Wark was to do the scientific work that earned him
international repute.
Although the work on the physical and chemical principles underlying
the electrodeposition of zinc was important to the company and
was of a highly original nature, company policy precluded publication
and it was not until 1964 that the company allowed publication
of one aspect of the work. Gepp left the company in 1929 with
the inevitable result that the research into electrodeposition
ceased. H. Hey, who at the time was chief metallurgist with the
E.Z. Co, came to the rescue with the proposition that Wark should
switch over to mineral flotation research under his general direction
but supported financially by a consortium of mining companies,
namely, Zinc Corporation Ltd, Broken Hill South Ltd, North Broken
Hill Ltd, Mount Lyell Mining and Railway Co Ltd, Burma Corporation
Ltd and Electrolytic Zinc Co of Australia Ltd. The mining companies
of Broken Hill had pioneered the use of flotation (particularly
differential flotation) processes in ore-dressing and had accumulated
much practical experience without a great deal of scientific understanding
of why or how the process worked. It was to their credit or
perhaps to Hey's persuasive powers that they were prepared to
support, albeit at a very low level, fundamental research into
the scientific principles underlying the flotation process. The
companies continued support of this work until 1939, when Wark
joined CSIR to establish research activity in chemistry for the
benefit of Australian industry. E.J. Hartung,
who followed Rivett as professor of chemistry in the University
of Melbourne in 1928, also continued to provide laboratory accommodation
for Wark and his assistants and made it possible for Mrs Elsie
Wark, a science graduate from Sydney whom he had married during
1927, to work on the more academic aspects of Wark's research
topics through the provision of occasional research grants. On
his appointment to CSIR, Wark's personal research career virtually
ended; the research in this field was continued in the Physical
Chemistry Section of the new CSIR Division of Industrial Chemistry
under K.L. Sutherland,
who had been Wark's research assistant from the beginning of 1937.
Wark's international scientific reputation rests exclusively on
the research in mineral flotation and surface chemistry conducted
during the period 1929-39. That this work was immediately successful
and so consistently productive was quite remarkable; Wark had
only one research assistant provided by the mining companies (A.B.
Cox 1929-36 K.L. Sutherland 1937-39) together with help from his
wife. The accommodation, which served as office and laboratory,
was simply appalling; in these days it would have been condemned
on health, safety and many other grounds. No present-day researcher
would have considered accepting a job that required operating
alone in such a laboratory, yet three people used it as office,
laboratory and store-room for more than 10 years.
Wark's scientific research
Wark's scientific research can be classified conveniently under
the heads:
- metallic hydroxy-acid complexes;
- electrochemistry, particularly the electrodeposition of zinc;
- physics and chemistry of the mineral flotation process and
related surface chemistry;
- miscellaneous studies, mostly stimulated by work on the three
topics listed above.
His first contribution to the scientific literature was an account
with J. Packer of their joint MSc project. The second, however,
was a letter to Nature on 'Energy changes involved in transmutation'.
Evidently there had been some discussion of the possibility of
the transmutability of sensible amounts of one element into others,
but the accompanying energy changes had been ignored even though
the liberation of energy had been established as a concomitant
of the radioactive break-down of a nucleus. Wark examined the
consequences of this 'should it ever become possible to control
the breaking up of elements', one of which was that the availability
of this intra-atomic energy 'should provide a satisfactory solution
to the problems raised by the world's dwindling sources of power'.
He also examined the consequences of the uncontrolled release
of nuclear energy, describing a runaway 'chain' reaction (the
word had not been invented in 1922) and commented 'the world might
be reduced by some enterprising chemist or physicist to a white-hot
nebulous mass'. This short communication may not be a contribution
to original research but it demonstrates a maturity of thought
well beyond that normally expected in a 22-year-old PhD student.
The letter could well have been written twenty years later.
Constitution of metal organic hydroxy-acid complexes
The suppression of the reactions of heavy metals by organic hydroxy
acids, such as tartaric and citric acids, had been the subject
of investigation since the 19th century. The intensely blue alkali
copper tartrate solutions had attracted much attention, particularly
since Fehling's solution was a reagent of some analytical importance
at the time. By 1920 the complex ion constitution was still unresolved,
even though numerous compounds had been isolated and analysed.
Masson had published a paper on the subject in 1899 and still
wished to see the problem solved, so he set Packer and Wark the
problem as an MSc research project. The resulting publication
described the preparation and analysis of a number of crystalline
neutral and alkaline cupritartrates, and established the stoichiometry
and the fact that the copper atoms were incorporated in the anions.
Since solutions of the neutral sodium salt did not oxidize glucose,
but the alkaline sodium salts did, they concluded that the active
principle of Fehling's solution would contain one or more of the
complex anions of these salts. The paper also served to demonstrate
that the structure of such complex anions would not readily be
revealed by studies of salts of the relatively complicated dibasic
dihydroxy acids such as tartaric.
As mentioned earlier, delays in the provision of a major piece
of equipment for his intended PhD programme at University College,
London, resulted in Wark pursuing, first as a stop-gap and then
as a total programme, the further study of metallic hydroxy-acid
complexes. Acting on his conclusion that simpler hydroxy acids
would prove more tractable than the dibasic dihydroxy acids such
as tartaric, he turned his attention to compounds formed with
lactic and malic acids. He did not succeed in isolating any pure
solid compounds from reactions between sodium hydroxide and copper
lactate, but was able to establish the presence of a complex copper-containing
anion in alkaline solutions containing excess sodium lactate by
using the Nernst formula to obtain the Cu2+ ion concentration
from single electrode potential measurements. Malic acid was much
more productive; Wark isolated and characterized a number of salts
of cuprimalic acid, and demonstrated by Masson's electrolytic
method that the copper was present in the anion in alkaline solutions
of cupric malate. At this stage the structure of the anion was
still an open question, but a great deal of chemistry had been
tidied up.
While at the University of California, at Berkeley, Wark was able
to establish that the monobasic monohydroxy acids, lactic, mandelic,
glycollic and salicylic, gave rise to similar copper-containing
complex acids and was able to isolate the sodium salts of these
acids from alcoholic solutions. It was clear that the hydroxy
group was acidic and that it was the point of attachment of the
cupric ions in all complexes with these four hydroxy acids.
Even as late as 1929 the existence of alpha-cupritartrates was
being denied by two European chemists, who contended that the
alkaline solutions were colloidal suspensions of copper hydroxide
in neutral or alkaline tartrate solutions. By this time Mrs Wark
was working with her husband in the Chemistry Department of the
University of Melbourne, supported by research grants, and they
carried out significant studies on these complexes. By using the
technique of potentiometric titration, it was established that,
at a NaOH/Cu molar ratio of 5/4, the e.m.f. of the hydrogen electrode
rose sharply, indicating the onset of complex formation by analogy
with similar behaviour observed with the monobasic monohydroxy
acids. Studies of the Zn and Pb complexes of the monobasic monohydroxy
acids with a view to preparation of alkaloid salts for optical
resolution studies and of the stability constants of some 3-valent
metal complexes of tartaric acid completed this series of investigations.
An isolated paper on aluminium salicylic acid complexes resulting
from a brief collaboration with G.J. Burrows in Sydney described
some new compounds, but the study was inconclusive as an attempt
to resolve the structural problem.
The research in the field of metallic hydroxy-acid complexes was
extraordinarily painstaking, meticulous and in the pattern of
much of the chemical research of the day into the nature of complex
molecules and ions. The work added careful information on the
properties of these particular hydroxy-acid complexes to the store
of chemical knowledge, but it did not resolve the original question
of the structure of the complex cupri-alpha-hydroxy-acid ion.
It was a well-executed academic chemical study, but the conclusion
that the bases of the complexes were 5-membered rings, while certainly
correct, could not be established unequivocally at that time,
even though the existence of complex anions of this class in the
monobasic monohydroxy acids, mandelic and salicylic, left little
alternative to this structure.
Studies on the electrodeposition of zinc
The period 1926-29 immediately on his return from Sydney was spent
by Wark in research on the physical and chemical basis of the
electrodeposition of zinc from solution. H.W. Gepp, general manager
of the Electrolytic Zinc Co of Australasia, had appointed Sir
David Orme Masson, then Emeritus Professor of Chemistry in the
University of Melbourne, as consultant; Wark carried out his research
under Masson's general direction and had as successive co-workers
E.E. Jones, metallurgist/electrical engineer with extensive experience
of the Risdon process for 6 months, and H.P. Matthews, a metallurgist/chemist
from the Port Pirie works of the Broken Hill Associated Smelters
Pty Ltd (BHAS). Wark considered this to be one of the most
productive periods of his life. Unfortunately, company policy
precluded publication, so that the comprehensive report (235pp.
of single-spaced quarto typewriting) on his three years' research,
together with proposals for further work, is still not published.
One must judge the quality of the work on his publications on
peripheral matters and on two substantial papers published respectively
35 years and 50 years later with permission of the E.Z. Company.
The fact that research results can still command journal space
as original work 50 years after completion speaks volumes for
the quality of the research and for the security of information
within the metallurgical industry.
The first two papers are improvements in method and apparatus,
the first concerned with a more rapid procedure for the calibration
of conductivity apparatus and the second with a much more accurate
procedure for the use of a copper coulometer following investigation
of the causes of error under a wide variety of conditions of use.
The main purpose of this research programme, however, was to try
to obtain a better understanding of the physics and chemistry
of the electrodeposition process without involvement in actual
plant trials. Cobalt, derived from the Broken Hill ore and always
a minor constituent of the Risdon circuit liquors, was known to
have a deleterious effect on the current efficiency of the zinc
deposition process; the understanding of the way in which cobalt
affected the electrolytic process was a major goal of the research.
As a starting point, Wark made a careful investigation of the
electrolysis of extremely pure zinc sulfate solutions. Plant practice
had established that current efficiency (percentage of total current
used in depositing zinc metal) decreased with time from the start
of electrodeposition and that the addition of glue to the electrolyte
greatly decreased the deterioration with time. However, in pure
solutions Wark found that the current efficiency was constant
with respect to time, current density and temperature and that
glue and other colloidal solutions were unnecessary. He also made
one important observation, that the current efficiency was determined
by the ratio of the molar concentrations of Zn2+ and H+. The
formalized expression of this relationship was discovered during
1926-29, published in 1964, and is now referred to as Wark's Rule.
The next step was to study the effects of small concentrations
of added cobalt sulfate on the current efficiency. A series of
experiments studying the effects of temperature, acidity, current
density and glue addition at various cobalt concentrations showed
that Wark' s Rule applied at the start of the electrolysis. However,
as time passed the current efficiency fell dramatically, although
the effect was counteracted to some extent by higher current densities
and higher rates of addition of glue to the electrolyte. The deterioration
in current efficiency, that is, reduction in the electrodeposition
of zinc, was considered by Wark to originate in the lower hydrogen
overvoltage of the cobalt deposited with the zinc on the cathode
than that of zinc itself. This results in a local couple, zinc
is dissolved, exposing more cobalt and re-solution of the zinc
proceeds autocatalytically. Wark demonstrated that all the results
on the time dependence of the current efficiency fitted excellently
the mathematical expression of this autocatalytic reaction. However,
no more detailed mechanism for the effect of cobalt has been advanced.
In the second papers published in 1979, when Wark was 80 years
of age, the data accumulated 50 years previously was used to refute
the view that 100% current efficiency would be attainable if the
electrolyte solutions were absolutely free of impurities. Actually,
a current efficiency of 100% is the unattainable limiting value
at zero acid concentration, as expressed by Wark's Rule.
Surface chemistry and flotation
The concentration of ore by flotation had been achieved commercially
in Australia in 1904 and by differential flotation in 1912. By
1927 there was a wealth of experience of the process among Australian
metallurgists and mining engineers, but little understanding of
the scientific basis for its successful operation. Overseas, particularly
in American institutions, there had been a substantial amount
of investigation, but experimental studies were plagued by irreproducibility
and many theories of flotation existed. Many investigators had
attempted to use the contact angle between an air bubble and a
mineral surface as a measure of the adhesion between the mineral
and air, and excellent apparatus had been developed for the measurement.
However, the uncertainties in the experimental results and the
inadequacies in interpretation meant that the understanding was
still elementary and confused. It was at this point that Wark
entered the field with A.B. Cox as his research assistant and
decided to measure contact angles with apparatus based on the
bubble machine developed by A.F. Taggart and his collaborators
in the USA.
The initial study was directed at the role of collectors, reagents
that promote contact between an air bubble and a mineral surface
and so achieve flotability. The collectors chosen for study were
the soluble xanthates and the minerals were those of significance
in the Broken Hill ore bodies. Meticulous attention was paid to
the reliability of the experimental method, to the purification
of all reagents and to the method of preparing uncontaminated
mineral surfaces that gave quantitatively reproducible results.
The effects of activators and other modifiers used for changing
the contact angle of a mineral surface were studied exhaustively.
The presentation of the results of this work to a meeting of the
American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers in February
1932 had an immediate and dramatic impact. Up to this time there
was a great deal of inconsistency and disagreement in experimental
results and very little agreement about the scientific basis
of the flotation process. Suddenly, surfaces could be prepared
that gave consistent results; experimental results started to
make more theoretical sense; directions for further research were
clearly indicated. In the discussion of this paper Professor A.M.
Gaudin, one of the foremost authorities in the field of mineral
flotation, commented:
From a scientific viewpoint few papers on flotation have been
published that come up to the high standard of excellence attained
by the contribution of Messrs. Wark and Cox. This memoir is definitely
probing the realm of the unknown further into the distance, and
indeed, marks a further step in the contribution to pure chemistry
which the scientific phases of flotation are making.
Wark and Cox had established that if mineral surfaces were polished
as for microscopic examination, but finally wiped on clean linen
under water to remove adhering particles and slime, they would
not make contact with an air bubble in distilled water. Of the
sulfide minerals, some made contact with air when treated with
a collector such as ethyl xanthate; others needed a preliminary
treatment with an activator, such as copper sulphate for sphalerite,
before an air-bubble contact could be achieved. The angle of contact,
when achieved, turned out to be the same for all minerals and
a particular xanthate; in an homologous series of xanthates the
contact angle increased with increasing number of carbon atoms
in the non-polar group. This constancy of the contact angle for
a particular collecting agent for all sulfide surfaces indicates
that the non-polar groups of the adsorbed collector molecules
are oriented away from the mineral surface. Wark and Cox assumed
that they were closely packed. A critical pH value, above which
contact ceases and which varies with collector concentration,
exists for each mineral/collector combination; this pH-concentration
relation is called a 'contact curve' and is a useful device in
designing or explaining selective flotation separations in practice.
These curves were an important innovation in flotation research
and were developed and used universally to great effect.
Subsequently Wark and Cox were able to demonstrate that these
curves were lines of constant ratio of collector ions to hydroxyl
ion concentrations and indicated competitive adsorption on the
mineral surface as an explanation of this behaviour. The alkali,
which interferes with the effectiveness of collectors for certain
minerals, is representative of a class of chemicals known as depressants,
to which cyanide and hydrosulfide ion also belong. This first
paper was indeed a landmark in that it provided a satisfactory
experimental method for studying the role of the various flotation
reagents and the influence of these reagents on the behaviour
of others, specifically the effect on the behaviour of collectors.
In addition it provided satisfactory but fairly simple hypotheses
of the way in which these various reagents worked.
Thereafter, in a series of papers with A.B. Cox, E.E. Wark and
later K.L. Sutherland and J. Rogers, under the general title of
'Principles of Flotation' and published as Technical Publications
of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers,
the role of these reagents was investigated in meticulous detail
and the 'contact curve' was developed as a meaningful expression
of the influence of these various reagents on the essential interaction
for flotation, namely, adhesion of an air bubble to the mineral
surface. The practical incentive for these studies was the understanding
of the conditions required for selective flotation and the ability
to design processes for the selective separation of particular
mixtures of minerals.
An enormous amount of reliable data was built up through painstaking
experimental work and this demonstration of the power of the experimental
methods stimulated much further work, particularly in the USA,
Germany and Russia. The model of collector action adsorption via
the polar groups of the collector molecules on to the mineral
surface in competition with other ions was gradually consolidated
and elaborated. The meaning of contact curves was gradually elucidated.
With both cyanide and alkali present the adsorption of ethyl xanthate
on the mineral surface depended on both pH and cyanide concentration.
The contact curve was shown to be a line of constant CN- concentration,
which indicates that a certain critical concentration of cyanide
ion must be exceeded to prevent xanthate adsorption. Again one
must assume competitive adsorption as the model. Exactly parallel
behaviour was found when sodium sulfide was used as a depressant;
the contact curve was found to be a line of constant hydrosulfide
ion (SH-) concentration. With the further addition of copper sulfate,
if it is required as an activator, the interpretation of the resulting
contact curves is by no means simple, but the main effect is the
reduction of the depressant function of cyanide by the removal
of CN- ion in the formation of complex cupricyanide ions. Wark
and Cox used the potential difference between a copper electrode
immersed in a solution of known copper ion concentration and another
copper electrode in a solution containing a copper salt with alkali
and cyanide to determine the copper ion concentration in the latter.
Because of the relationship between this e.m.f. and the copper
ion concentration, lines of constant e.m.f. on the cyanide-pH
diagram are lines of constant copper ion concentration. It was
established experimentally in this work that the bubble contact
curve for chalcopyrite was a curve of constant copper ion concentration
(critical concentration). This experimental approach was rediscovered
forty years later and used to good effect in modern flotation
studies.
By the mid-1930s, the accumulation of reliable data on the interaction
of flotation reagents and mineral surfaces had spawned an array
of theories on the action of these reagents, specifically of collectors.
Wark certainly favoured the surface adsorption model of collector
action in which the collector molecules formed an oriented closely
packed monomolecular film on the mineral surface. Taggart and
his colleagues had provided a chemical theory of flotation that
postulated the formation by double decomposition of insoluble
metal xanthates on the mineral surface, a view that arose from
the observation of a quantitative relationship between the insolubility
of a heavy metal xanthate and adsorption of a xanthate film at
the mineral surface (or the effectiveness of the reagent as a
collector). Wark and Cox argued that the Taggart theory was untenable
as a general model. Their paper is an excellent example of logical
argument and contains the occasional touch of wit, such as: 'The
behaviour of a naval rating on review is vastly different from
his behaviour on leave. Likewise a lead ion held in its allotted
place in the crystal lattice...cannot be expected to have the
same characteristics as a lead ion free-swimming in solution.'
However, there were, even at that time, observations that fitted
more easily into Taggart's model; surface-oxidized galena, which
is the state of the mineral by the time it reaches the flotation
cell, was a case in point. Much later work, namely, infra-red
spectroscopic studies of oxidized lead sulfide films reacted with
sodium ethyl xanthate and microcalorimetric studies of the reaction
of galena and lead sulfate with xanthate, established without
doubt that lead ethyl xanthate was formed on the mineral surface
in the presence of ethyl xanthate collectors. In other sulfide
minerals the presence of dixanthogen, produced by oxidation of
the xanthate, was established as the collector, adsorbed presumably
as a neutral molecule. Oxide and silicate minerals demand different
considerations, as do the slightly soluble salt-type minerals,
so that there is no universal model of collector interaction with
mineral surfaces.
A rather less amicable atmosphere surrounded the arguments about
the so-called adlineation theory of flotation proposed by Wolfgang
Ostwald in 1932. The theory itself is no longer of any consequence,
although it was certainly ingenious. Ostwald proposed that the
collector molecules were adsorbed in a line or ring to the mineral
surface at the point of attachment of the bubble, rather than
across the complete surface. The theory required the collector
molecules to have a triphyllic character, which most collector
molecules do not have. However, Ostwald was a senior German chemist
of international repute and at the time was editor of the prestigious
journal, Kolloidzeitschrift. Wark had submitted to this
journal a paper on the theory of flotation that was, in fact,
a detailed criticism of Ostwald's theory. Ostwald refused to publish
it, but after further representations an adjudicating panel of
three senior German physical chemists recommended publication,
but in Zeitschrift für physikalische Chemie. Ostwald's
theory did not survive.
The final paper of this series with which A.B. Cox was associated
explored the effects of temperature over the range 10°-35°C
on the adsorption of xanthate collector and on the function of
depressants and activators. The results were of some practical
significance, but the lack of quantitative data on the reactions
and equilibria involved frustrated any attempt to develop a detailed
theory of the temperature effects.
The entry of K.L. Sutherland into the field, when Cox went to
the Munitions Supply Laboratory, Maribyrnong, saw a new line of
investigation emerge. The study of contact curves for the commercial
flotation reagent Flotagen S (sodium mercaptobenzthiazole) under
conditions of varying temperature, depressant and activator concentrations,
for several sulfide minerals, threw up new features, specifically
islands and peninsulas of non-contact in the region conventionally
associated exclusively with contact. It was found that the island
areas occurred only in liquor containing copper salts and were
larger at lower temperatures, and that the contact diagram was
different at different copper concentrations and for different
anions present in the flotation liquor. The results of this first
study were so unexpected that they demanded a reinvestigation
of the xanthate contact curves under conditions where similar
effects might be expected, namely, lower collector concentrations
and temperatures. This study gave further clues to methods of
increasing the differentiation between minerals in flotation practice
using a single collector. The comprehensive study demonstrated
the successive stages of departure from the standard type of contact
diagram in copper-containing xanthate solutions through an isolated
island of non-contact at around pH 7, to growth and merging of
the island with the upper area of non-contact to form a peninsula,
to very limited areas of contact at low cyanide concentrations.
These effects were studied as a function of the xanthate concentration,
the amount of copper salt, the temperature and the nature of the
anions introduced in the copper salt, the alkali and other neutral
salts on a variety of sulfide minerals. It was established that
the islands of non-contact were associated with xanthate ion deficiency
and consequent incomplete coverage of the mineral surface with
adsorbed xanthate. The boundary of the islands is the locus of
points of critical values of the ratio of xanthate ion to cyanide
ion concentrations beyond which contact occurs.
In 1938 Wark and his wife began a study of the paraffin-chain
salts, both cationic and anionic, as flotation agents. Wark's
active participation with the experimental side of this research
ended with his appointment to CSIR, but Sutherland continued the
work at the University of Melbourne during 1940 and then incorporated
it in the research programme of the Physical Chemistry Section,
of which he had been appointed Leader, of the newly founded Division
of Industrial Chemistry, of which Wark had been appointed Chief.
Justification for the continuation of this research during the
1939-45 War lay in the fact that paraffin-chain salts had significance
as potential flotation agents for certain strategic minerals,
for example, cassiterite. The relevant paper was ultimately published
in 1946. Whether the paraffin-chain salt be anionic (hydrocarbon-chain
in the anion), such as soaps, alkyl sulfates etc, or cationic,
such as alkyl ammonium chlorides, the molecular ions are of a
polar-nonpolar character and are adsorbed on to appropriate surfaces
as oriented mono-molecular layers in much the same way as xanthates.
It is, of course, this property that confers on these compounds
their potential as flotation collectors. As one might expect,
the anionic compounds are generally useful for basic minerals,
whereas the cationic compounds are more useful for acidic minerals.
Specificity is not inherently very good, so this study was directed
towards the establishment of flotation specificity by careful
control of conditions determined by pH and depressant concentrations.
The contact curves (concentration of collector versus pH or concentration
of depressant versus pH at constant collector concentration) are
quite different in type from those established for the xanthate
collectors. The curves are typically enclosing areas of contact
(or flotation) extending to low collector concentrations centred
at pH values of about 7, with an upper limit at higher concentrations
above which contact is impossible. This limiting concentration
is of the same order as that at which micelle formation sets in,
but the loss of contact is not due to this. Moreover, there is
no prevention or reduction in the adsorption of collector on the
mineral surface. Wark had earlier attributed this type of behaviour
to 'armouring' of the bubble with oriented collector molecules
that must be displaced from the bubble surface for true air contact
with the mineral surface to be established. Subsequent research
substantiated this theory of the upper contact limit. The basic
principles and understanding established through this work led
to selective flotation schemes for tin ores, fluorite and scheelite.
Parallel with this series of Technical Publications in
which the emphasis was on the establishment of practical conditions
for flotation, Wark and his collaborators published in the Journal
of Physical Chemistry a separate series on the physical chemistry
of flotation. They explored the physics and chemistry of the adsorption
and interaction processes on which flotation depends in greater
depth than the work directed to the establishment of the optimum
conditions for a specific flotation process warranted. Here again
the first paper of the series, published in 1932, was by far the
most significant and established the contact angle as an appropriate
measurable physical quantity on which to base flotability. Wark
treated the problem of the adhesion between a bubble of air and
a single solid particle and the way in which this depends on the
contact angle q, which in itself is related to the
three interfacial tensions in
cos q = (Tas Tsw)/Twa.
Starting from the Bashforth and Adams classical treatment of the
shape and size of bubbles, Wark derived relationships between
volume of bubble, circle of contact of bubble with particle surface,
and contact angle. He computed sets of curves for the relationships
between each pair of variables for constant values of the third
variable. The relationship between maximum values of bubble volume
and radius of circle of contact and contact angle were confirmed
quantitatively by experimental measurements by Cox and later by
Frumkin in the USSR. Wark also considered the problems of (i)
hysteresis, that is, the difference in contact angles for advancing
and receding lines of air-solid contact, (ii) the stability of
attachment between particle and bubble in relative motion, and
(iii) the maximum size of particle that will float; he discussed
the significance of the findings in actual froth flotation. This
paper, one of the few in which Wark displayed his training and
undoubted ability in mathematics, clarified a confused literature
on the essential prerequisites for successful flotation and provided
a satisfying theoretical basis for subsequent experimental studies.
In it, in a single paragraph, Wark also effectively demolished
Ostwald's adlineation theory of flotation; however, as discussed
earlier, it took several further papers to remove the theory from
serious consideration by some workers in the field.
The majority of subsequent papers in this series were concerned
with the nature of the adsorption of soluble collectors on mineral
surfaces, unactivated and activated. Apart from the controversy
with Ostwald over the adlineation theory, which has been dealt
with earlier, these papers were concerned with differentiating
between Taggart's chemical theory and adsorption. The studies
were not conclusive; subsequent work showed that different mineral-collector
combinations behave in quite different ways. However, the assumption
that a complete coverage of the mineral surface was necessary
before flotation could be achieved turned out to be grossly wrong.
In fact, work in Wark's own laboratory, by G.R. Edwards and W.E.
Ewers, and elsewhere showed that less than 10% coverage in many
cases was sufficient to promote flotation. This problem is the
subject of active study at the present time.
Wark maintained an active interest in this field until his death.
He reviewed the outstanding problems of contact angle, adhesion
and flotation in several publications and contributed some original
concepts on the origin of hysteresis of contact angles in a paper
in 1977. At the time of his death he was involved in a joint study
aimed at the experimental confirmation of a thermodynamic hypothesis.
The paper describing the subsequently completed investigation
entitled 'Contact angle studies in water fluoroplastic systems
the effect of drop and bubble size' by R. Lamb, I.W. Wark and
T.W. Healy has been
accepted for publication in the Journal of Colloid and Interface
Science.
Although Wark's period of active personal research in this field
was ten years only, he influenced the subsequent research significantly.
Not only did he remove uncertainties in the experimental results
through devising and establishing impeccable techniques, he stimulated
overseas investigators to pursue new research lines through his
experimental results and his interpretation of them. Moreover,
he established a major school of flotation research that has continued
through its various offshoots to have a major impact on the development
of the subject up to the present. The Wark Symposium on the Principles
of Mineral Flotation held in his honour in 1983 provides ample
testimony to his influence over 50 years of scientific investigation.
Wark's monograph, Principles of Flotation, published in
1938, and its revised edition (1955), written in collaboration
with K.L. Sutherland, made immediate and sustained impact throughout
the world. They became standard text-books and reference books
on the subject for research workers and plant operators and were
translated into Russian, Japanese and Turkish. Indeed, 'Their
monograph Principles of Flotation...continues to be one of the
most important reference books available to plant and research
metallurgists in their efforts to solve the many problems still
occurring in flotation' (A.J. Lynch, Principles of Mineral
Flotation, The Wark Symposium [1984], p. 233).
From the time of publication of his first papers in the field,
Wark was invited to lecture to institutions and learned societies
on this work. Perhaps the key lectures were his Presidential Address
to Section B of ANZAAS in 1946 and the contributions to the 4th
European Mining and Metallurgical Congress in London in 1949,
the 8th Commonwealth Mining and Metallurgical Congress in Australia
and New Zealand in 1965 and the 5th Sir Julius Wernher Memorial
Lecture of The Institution of Mining and Metallurgy in London
in 1960. He lectured at various times to institutions in Russia
and Japan, where his reputation was well established in the 1940s.
Even as early as 1937, F.G. Donnan, Professor of Chemistry and
Director of the Chemical Laboratories, University College, London,
was able to write in a testimonial:
His researches on the extremely difficult subject of the theory
of ore flotation are recognised now throughout the world as by
far the finest work in this field. Indeed, I have heard several
European experts state that his work is regarded as classical
and of fundamental importance, both scientifically and practically.
The first papers in each of the two series of publications on
flotation contained a view of the principles of flotation that
did not change in any basic way during Wark's active research
career in the field. In fact, the point of view in his paper to
the 1983 symposium is much the same as that of 1932. It almost
looks as though he made an intensive study of the literature on
flotation, both principles and practice, decided what were the
current theoretical problems and what experiments had to be done
and, having done them, formulated a model of flotation that he
would not abandon easily. This would certainly be in character;
Wark did not easily change his mind when he had come to a conclusion
based on what he considered to be sound reasoning.
Miscellaneous studies
Apart from the letter to Nature on the consequences of
transmutation of the elements referred to earlier in the introductory
remarks on Wark's scientific research, there is only one other
research publication the origin of which cannot be attributed
directly to one or other of the three main research topics of
Wark's career, namely 'An extension of the conception of the distribution
co-efficient'. Arguing from the similarity of the mathematical
expressions for the pressure and temperature dependence of the
distribution of a solute between two phases and of chemical equilibrium,
Wark derived the basic equation for chemical equilibrium by treating
the reacting system as a distribution problem. Wark was disappointed
that this paper did not attract any attention, but it is difficult
to see any conceptual or derivational advantages.
General assessment of research contribution
Wark's personal scientific reputation rests exclusively on his
publications on mineral flotation. From the very outset his contributions
demanded attention and prompted further research. His first two
papers on the subject established a degree of order in a very
confused field and provided methods through which reproducible
results could be achieved. He certainly added new data and understanding
to the progress of the subject and initiated new lines of attack,
not by brilliant creative steps, but rather by impeccable experimental
technique, meticulous attention to detail in operation and interpretation
and by exploring exhaustively the consequences of change of every
conceivable variable for the system. His approach was always logical,
systematic, precise and exhaustive.
The CSIR/CSIRO period: Research direction and administration
Ian Wark's principal contribution to science and Australia was
his creation and development of the CSIR/CSIRO Division of Industrial
Chemistry. It was not by chance that Wark elected to major in
chemistry rather than physics or mathematics, in which he seemed
to be equally proficient if examination performance is any guide.
He found that some of the staff of the Chemistry Department imbued
in him an enthusiasm for the subject. Orme Masson was the professor
of chemistry and a dominant individual, not only in chemistry
in Australia but in science in general, in academic circles and
in influence with the governments of the day. When Wark entered
the University of Melbourne at the beginning of 1917 Masson was
at the height of his powers and influence and was leading the
move to establish a government-financed research facility directed
to the solution of industrial problems and the promotion of new
industrial enterprise. Masson' s protégé and next in seniority
in the department, A.C.D. Rivett,
returned to Melbourne from the UK, where he had been engaged
in munitions production, at the beginning of 1919. Rivett arranged
for Wark to be employed by E.Z. Co in 1920 and also initiated
the research appointment to the same company in 1926, and provided
laboratory accommodation in the Chemistry Department. Wark was
to some extent a Rivett protégé and had adequate
opportunity to promote to Rivett the need for chemical and metallurgical
research for industry. By the mid-1930s Wark had become dedicated
to the mineral industries and retained this inclination throughout
his life. Although from the time of the original legislation in
1917-18 for the establishment of CSIR's predecessor, the Institute
of Science and Industry, the first power and function cited for
the organization had been 'the initiation and carrying out of
scientific researches in connexion with, or for the promotion
of, primary or secondary industries in the Commonwealth', the
economic depression of the late '20s and '30s had left CSIR with
funds sufficient only for research in the most urgent aspects
of problems in primary industry. Any positive moves towards research
for secondary industry had had to be postponed. However, the threat
of war stimulated consideration of the needs in this area and
in 1937 a committee of the Commonwealth Government recommended
the formation of a national standards laboratory, an information
service, an aeronautical research laboratory and a chemical research
laboratory. The first three were soon commenced, but it took the
threat of imminent war to goad the CSIR to advertise for a Chief
for a Division of Secondary Industry. Rivett virtually offered
the job to Wark, but the CSIR Chairman, Sir George Julius,
a down-to-earth engineer, began to propose compromise arrangements
on the grounds of Wark's lack of experience outside a small research
laboratory. Rivett finally won this battle but R.G. Casey,
then the responsible Minister, postponed the establishment of
the new Division. Rivett bided his time; after war had started
he got approval to appoint Wark as Senior Chemist at £1,000
p.a. rather than Chief at £1,500 p.a. Together with E.J.
Drake, who had been assigned as his assistant, Wark prepared a
case for the establishment of a Division of Industrial Chemistry;
this secured approval from Rivett and ultimately from the Minister,
by now H.E. Holt, who obtained Cabinet authorization for its formation
early in 1940. Rivett provided unqualified support for the projected
development of the Division, both because it was his policy to
give complete freedom of action to an appointee that he considered
worthy of heading up a Division and because the wartime circumstances
demanded immediate attention to a range of chemical problems.
It was inevitable that rapid expansion of the Division should
take place for a considerable time and yet provision of laboratory
accommodation somehow did not rate top priority. For two years
the Division operated from a nucleus in the CSIR Head Office building
with temporary laboratory space in at least five other locations
around Melbourne, before a building, still quite inadequate for
the total staff and work even in 1942, was occupied at the Fishermen's
Bend site. This situation still persists to some extent; until
recently successive CSIRO Executives failed to give the proper
accommodation of the chemical divisions adequate priority so as
to solve the problem once and for all. However, the final laboratory
building on the Clayton site could be occupied during 1987.
Wark set out to establish a Division of Industrial Chemistry whose
objectives were:-
- to provide technical efficiency in established industries;
- to stimulate the establishment of new industries;
- to encourage the use of raw materials of Australian origin;
- to seek substitutes for imported materials;
- to find uses for by-products not utilized;
- to study national problems to which its officers can contribute
by virtue of their experience in other fields.
The conventional structure for the research activity of CSIR Divisions
was already established as a number of component Sections under
research leaders. Wark proposed a mixture of Section names, some
with disciplinary, others with commodity or industry titles, namely,
Physical Chemistry; Organic Chemistry; Biochemistry; Chemical
Engineering; Mineral Chemistry; Cement, Ceramics and Refractories;
Dairy Research; Physical Metallurgy (jointly with the Division
of Aeronautics); and later Chemical Physics and Foundry Sands.
Initially, Wark made fairly detailed lists of projects, based
largely on the perceived needs of existing industries and the
immediate requirements for the prosecution of the recently declared
war. The bias was fairly heavily towards the mining and mineral
industries, partly because of their national importance and partly
because Wark's own experience and interest lay in this field.
As time passed, the programmes changed to reflect the interests
and views of the Sections; each Section developed its own particular
character, displayed through its philosophy, outlook and research
activity.
Growth in staff numbers was steady in the post-war years, but
the accommodation situation deteriorated dramatically. Wark gave
strong support to proposals from the Section leaders that appealed
to him, mainly through formal documentation and representations
in person to Rivett and F.W.G. White,
who had become the Assistant Executive Officer with responsibilities
in the physical sciences area. Yet the acquisition of modern equipment
and some staff growth completely outstripped the provision of
accommodation, a situation which became steadily worse through
the 1950s when a large proportion of the Division's research,
involving a substantial amount of sophisticated equipment, was
housed in converted disposal army huts and other makeshift accommodation.
For the new chemical laboratory to reach such a state in ten years,
there must have been deficiencies in the promotion of the capital
works requirements at some level, even allowing for the fact that
funds for these purposes were limited. Wark's approach, at this
stage of his career, was perhaps too timid and relied too much
on the presentation of an argued case on paper. In spite of this,
the scientific output and reputation of the Division grew and
recognition in international scientific and industrial circles
was established early in the Division's life. This was undoubtedly
due to Wark's acceptance and practice of Rivett's philosophy,
namely, that the selection of staff was of paramount importance
and that top-quality scientific staff could be left to tackle
the problems for which they were appointed without interference.
Wark started the project of creating a national chemical laboratory
with an outstanding academic background, an established reputation
in the scientific principles of mineral flotation, a fairly widespread
understanding of the chemical and mineral industries and virtually
no experience in administering a large operation or handling a
large staff. In spite of this latter deficiency and the problems
arising from it, Wark created a research establishment of considerable
stature. By 1958 the Division of Industrial Chemistry had developed
to such an extent that the CSIRO Executive decided to reconstitute
it as the Chemical Research Laboratories with Wark as the foundation
Director and the constituent parts Divisions and Sections (later
all became Divisions). This new group laboratory continued until
1970, but the nature of the administrative control changed in
1961, when Wark moved to the CSIRO Head Office as a member of
the Executive. The story of Wark's achievements in the establishment
and development of the Division of Industrial Chemistry has been
recorded in greater detail elsewhere and need not be repeated
here.
Wark's appointment to the CSIRO Executive in 1961 was not the
first occasion in which he was considered for an Executive post.
Rivett had been keen for him to apply for one of the Assistant
Executive Officer positions that the Executive advertised in 1944;
Wark had investigated the post but after due consideration did
not lodge an application. Again, he was certainly considered seriously
in exploratory discussions in 1949 on the retirement of Rivett
and A.E.V. Richardson,
when the Executive was reconstituted under the new Act with a
full-time Chairman and two members; yet evidently he was not approached.
During his term on the Executive he saw many changes in its composition
and served a period as Acting Chairman. Wark did not really enjoy
his period on the Executive but went about the job with characteristic
dedication. He saw the nature of the Executive change in his opinion
not for the better and supported a return to the three-man Executive.
At the age of 65 years he declined appointment for a second term
and moved with relief to the post of Chairman of the new Commonwealth
Advisory Committee on Advanced Education.
It was at about this time that he wrote a book entitled Why
Research? for a career series. He had made a lecture tour
of New Zealand under the auspices of the University Grants Commission
of New Zealand in 1962 and one of his lectures was subsequently
published in Nature in 1963. As a result of this he was
invited to write a book for secondary school students by the English
publishers, Educational Explorers Limited. The book, published
in 1968, was to some extent autobiographical and enjoyed a reasonable
sales success.
Promotion of tertiary education
During his time on the CSIRO Executive, Wark had occasion to establish
close relations with J.G. Gorton, at that time Minister in charge
of Commonwealth Activities in Education and Research. Hence it
was no surprise, when the Commonwealth Government decided to set
up a new Advisory Committee on Advanced Education in 1965, that
Wark was appointed its first Chairman. During the previous ten
years, successive governments had enquired into the state of education
in Australia and had recognized the deplorable state of university
accommodation, facilities and funding. Corrective measures taken
through the establishment of a Universities Commission were having
recognizable effects by the early 1960s. However, a further enquiry
into tertiary education under the Chairman of the Universities
Commission, Sir Leslie Martin, urged the development of the non-university
tertiary stream, which in 1962 was attracting only 7% of the total
money available for tertiary education even though it represented
37% of total tertiary students. The function of Wark's committee
was, through advice to the Minister, to promote the 'balanced
development of tertiary education outside the university system',
in particular 'in connection with grants for capital and recurrent
purposes' to Commonwealth and State institutions other than universities
for teaching at the advanced education level.
Wark was able to channel funds into the Colleges of Advanced Education
(CAE) system and encourage the States to make special provision
for the tertiary colleges over the period of his chairmanship
from 1965 to 1971. Dramatic changes were evident early in this
period, but the transformation was not without its problems. Wark's
advice to the Minister during the development of the Commonwealth's
policies on tertiary education had a considerable influence on
the CAE sector. Some of the policies adopted by the Wark Committee
were not helpful where States were attempting to ensure that CAE
courses and the resulting awards were at a standard equivalent
to those at universities already accepted by professional and
employing bodies. The award of bachelor's degrees by the CAEs
was opposed at first; the various States went ahead, but with
suitable controls. Later moves into the area of higher degrees
by research were opposed even though the policies had been developed
and justified in great detail. Again the States went ahead with
very successful higher-degree programmes, but without funding
support. Even in the late '70s the Commonwealth was still giving
lukewarm approval only to Master's degrees by research in the
CAE system, preferring Master's programmes based on course work.
Although he had been located in a university department for the
duration of his active research career, Wark had had no direct
involvement with tertiary education prior to 1965. He had, however,
definite ideas about tertiary education and throughout his term
on the Council of the Australian Academy of Science contributed
a great deal towards stimulating the government to look carefully
at the problems of scientific manpower and funding of university
research. Clearly he had thought deeply about the problems and
had formulated a personal educational philosophy. Up to 1965 he
had not made a public statement, either oral or written, on education
matters, but from the time of his appointment as Chairman of the
Advisory Committee he gave many addresses and wrote many articles
on the problems of advanced education. His influence on the development
of the CAE sector was very great; the tertiary colleges throughout
Australia should all be very grateful to him.
The following extract from the citation at the conferring of the
degree of Doctor of Arts and Sciences (honoris causa) of
the Victoria Institute of Colleges on Sir Ian Wark on 8 May 1979
is an excellent statement of his contribution:
The years 1965 to 1971 were tumultuous. They were marked by a
rate and scale of development, both quantitative and qualitative,
which have few parallels in our education history. As Chairman
of the CACAE, Sir Ian oversaw, encouraged and supported the
creation and development of over fifty colleges of advanced education
in all States of the Commonwealth. In close partnership with State
authorities, of which the VIC was proudly one, Sir Ian helped
to transform tertiary education in Australia. His vision, courage,
leadership and extraordinary and diverse skills were profoundly
important in the process of creating colleges of advanced education
as they now are out of a relatively small number of technical
and other specialised colleges which were desperately lacking
in the tangible and intangible resources essential for a healthy
institution. The high academic and professional standing of advanced
education awards and the complete recognition of college graduates
is testament to Sir Ian's pioneering work...There can be few men
who have made so great a contribution to Australia in science,
administration and education as Sir Ian Wark.
He continued his association with the college sector for some
years (1971-77) after his retirement from the Advisory Committee,
as a member of the South Australian Board of Advanced Education.
Extra-mural activities
Association with learned societies
Perhaps Ian Wark's outstanding characteristic was his inability
to do nothing. His life was filled with purposeful activity; his
off-duty hours were devoted to matters of professional, scientific
or public interest or to leisure interests, both sporting and
cultural, to which he gave the same concentration to achieve the
maximum contribution of which he was capable.
Wark became actively involved in learned and professional bodies
concerned with chemistry from the time of his graduation. His
first and main affiliation was to the recently established (1917)
Australian Chemical Institute (now the Royal Australian Chemical
Institute); he became an Associate member in 1921. Together with
the local Melbourne University Chemical Society, the Chemical
Institute provided a continuing forum for meeting with other chemists
and lecturing on his own topics throughout his life. He contributed
to the development of the Institute in many ways, serving as the
Victorian Branch President in 1942 and 1943, as Federal President
in 1958 and as the inaugural President of its Colloid and Surface
Chemistry Division in 1978. He was honoured by the Institute by
the award of the H.G. Smith Medal for his scientific research
in 1933 and the Leighton Memorial Medal in 1966.
The other major body catering for chemistry was the Australian
and New Zealand Association for the Advancement of Science (ANZAAS).
Wark became involved early in his career, becoming a Fellow in
1946 and as such a member of the Australian National Research
Council (ANRC), which was comprised of the Australian Fellows
of ANZAAS. It was as a member of ANRC that he became convener
of the National Committee for Chemistry, the body that maintained
links with the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry
until the creation of the Australian Academy of Science in 1954.
Wark served as a Vice-President of Section B (Chemistry) of ANZAAS
on several occasions and Section President at the Adelaide Congress
in 1946. He was awarded the ANZAAS Medal in 1973.
The research on the mineral flotation process led to many calls
for Wark to lecture to societies of a more applied character,
particularly those associated with the mining and metallurgical
industries. He was very highly regarded in these quarters; in
fact, the Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy was
the publisher of his Principles of Flotation in 1938 and its revised
version with K.L. Sutherland in 1955. He was elected to Honorary
Membership of the Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
in 1960.
By the time the Australian Academy of Science was founded in 1954,
Wark had become actively interested in the more general problems
of science its promotion, its impact on the community, its place
in education, its contribution to industrial and economic welfare.
He was elected a Fellow (FAA) in 1954 in the group required by
the Charter to be added to the Petitioners before 15 May to bring
the Fellowship numbers to 50 at least. From that point on, he
contributed actively and constructively to a wide range of Academy
concerns and was elected a member of Council in 1959 and Treasurer
for the period August 1959 to 1963. One of the early concerns
of the Council and Fellowship was the adequacy or otherwise of
the nation's scientific manpower. After discussion at the first
General Meeting in November 1954 and at the first Annual General
Meeting in 1955, two Fellows from each State were asked to report
on the problem as it affected their region and to make proposals
for its correction. Discussion at the 1956 Annual General Meeting
led to a conference of representatives of various institutions
on 'Scientific Manpower' in Melbourne in November 1956. At the
next Annual General Meeting, Wark proposed that the Academy should
press for a full enquiry and Council asked him to prepare a report
for submission to the government. While the government did not
accept the proposal for an enquiry, the report certainly influenced
its attitude to the importance of support for science and technology.
Once he was elected to Council, Wark became even more active and
influential in promoting proposals to the government for assistance
in various ways funds for research, post-doctoral fellowships to
promote the effectiveness of science and technology in national
growth.
It was as Treasurer that Wark made his most valuable contribution
to the Academy. The appeal for funds to cover the capital cost
of the Academy's new building was greatly under-subscribed and
it was evident that a major benefactor was needed. Through a friend
of long standing, Wark identified J. Ellerton Becker
as a prospect. With assistance from the President of the day,
J.C. Eccles, and the
Prime Minister, R.G. Menzies,
Wark persuaded Becker to cover the building debt and to provide
additional substantial funds to support Academy activities. He
gained great satisfaction from the obvious pleasure that Becker
and his wife derived from the Academy association; Becker became
a Fellow by Special Election in 1961 and served on Council, 1965-68.
Wark was appointed a Governor (honorary) of the newly established
Ian Potter Foundation in 1964 and remained so until his death.
In this capacity he was able to find support for various scientific
activities and in his last few years saw the Ian Potter Foundation
contribute $250,000 to the cost of alterations to and refurbishment
of Ian Potter House for the Academy.
Learned societies and applied science and technology
Perhaps Ian Wark's most enduring passion was his conviction that
applied science was undervalued in scientific circles and that
applied scientists were given inadequate recognition. The origin
of this belief is somewhat surprising since he himself was by
inclination and training an academic scientist, who by force of
circumstance became an applied scientist, and who was recognized
and acclaimed throughout the scientific community for his applied
work. Be that as it may, there is no doubt that Wark was dedicated
to the cause of applied science and influenced the course of events
in Australia.
The debate, which centred mainly around the Academy, became a
black-and-white issue; individuals were cast in one role or the
other, in spite of the fact that different people did not agree
on what constituted 'applied science' or how it related to 'technology'.
It is perhaps significant that the Petitioners for the Charter
founding the Academy included Essington Lewis and W.S. Robinson,
two of Australia's leading industrialists, and that in the '50s
and '60s the Academy's Regional Groups held frequent dinner meetings
at which other leaders in industry, technology and business were
present as guests and speakers.
At the time when Wark retired from Council in 1963, there was
a body of opinion represented by a number of Fellows that closer
relations should be established between the Academy and leaders
of industry and government and other community leaders, in order
to promote better understanding and better use of science. Wark
was active in this move and participated in leading roles over
the next two years (1964-66) in symposia organized to explore
possible mechanisms for achieving the desired relationship between
the Academy on the one hand and industry and government on the
other. He also used his close relationship with Commonwealth and
State Government leaders to promote his objectives. Meanwhile
the Academy Council was struggling with the problem of the most
appropriate form for the joint representative body and the means
of financing it. The establishment of the Science and Industry
Forum as a Standing Committee of the Academy on 7 December 1966
was a significant and highly successful decision. A factual account
of this development, including Wark's part in it, is given in
the Academy's publication The First Twenty-five Years (Chap.
13, pp.164-169).
The other aspect of this preoccupation with applied science concerned
the election of applied scientists to the Fellowship of the Academy.
The debate in Council and at General Meetings continued for many
years, often stimulated or carried by Wark. Ultimately, this led
to the establishment of the Australian Academy of Technological
Sciences in 1976, the composition of which bears a resemblance
to that of the ANRC, which voted itself out of existence on the
formation of the Academy. Wark had a significant role in the foundation
of the new Academy of Technological Sciences and became one of
its foundation fellows.
Twilight years
Honorary consultancy
In 1971, at the age of 72 years, Ian Wark found himself without
a full-time occupation, but was not prepared to retire. His lifelong
involvement in and association with minerals research and the
mineral industry was not to be left unused. I.E. Newnham,
Director of the newly founded CSIRO Minerals Research Laboratories,
invited Wark to become an Honorary Consultant to the group. This
provided office accommodation and secretarial help at two locations,
the Division of Mineral Chemistry at Garden City and the Division
of Chemical Engineering at Clayton, between which, in spite of
several nomenclature changes, Wark divided his time until his
death. It is clear that he advised widely during these years,
helped in some of the chores such as arranging seminar programmes,
and committed much to paper. He even returned to one or two unresolved
problems from his early research career, which resulted in a paper
on the electrodeposition of zinc and three papers on problems
in flotation research published in the late '70s and early '80s.
Personal records and documentation activities
Throughout his life Wark recorded diary notes. He kept his opinions
and views on events and people on record; in fact, records, no
longer extant, of every individual who had been employed, however
briefly and at any level, within his CSIR/CSIRO bailiwick contained
comments on their performance and personal qualities that would
be dangerous in these days of freedom of information legislation.
Wark continued to keep perhaps unfortunately detailed comments
on people and events as he saw them, right to the end.
He spent a great deal of time from 1971 organizing his biographical
material, writing accounts of various parts of his life, collecting
together documents and personal papers. In fact, his biographer
will have a remarkably easy task; all the necessary material is
accessible and organized. The compilation of this biographical
memoir would have been much more onerous without Wark's foresight
in his retirement period.
Wark the man
It was clear from Ian Wark's schooldays that he was destined to
make a significant contribution in whatever career he chose and
that he had remarkable powers of concentration and a single-minded
determination to succeed. Throughout life, he worked with great
application and for long hours, but work was by no means his sole
interest in life. He was fond of physical activity and had a better-than-average
record in a number of sports. He played golf regularly and was
an outstanding exponent of fly-fishing. It was typical of the
man that he devised a trout fly which is still catalogued and
sold as Dr Wark's Special throughout the world.
Wark had catholic tastes in music, literature and the arts and
in latter years tried his hand at musical composition, a full-length
play, a one-act thriller and some verse.
His accomplishments in his three major fields research, research
administration and education remain tremendous and stamp him as
a man of considerable stature and influence. He was aware of his
successes and derived pleasure from the awards that flowed to
him from learned societies, academic institutions and governments.
Throughout it all he maintained his principles, his humanity and
his friendliness.
As a person he was reserved to the point of being shy, particularly
up to about 50 years of age, and at no stage did he become reconciled
to clubs. On the other hand he enjoyed and relaxed in the company
of people he knew well. To his staff he was always somewhat apart,
even though he went to great lengths to establish democratic habits;
only to some of his senior staff did he ever become close. These
characteristics were probably ingrained from student and early
post-graduate days in a generation where even senior lecturing
staff of a university department addressed the professor by title
throughout the whole of a career.
Wark was always very sure of the opinions he had formed, either
on issues of consequence or on people. There was rarely any doubt
in his own mind about the quality of the opinion; there were few
grey areas. This may have been a refreshing characteristic in
many circumstances, but the inflexibility to change or compromise
was a fault. Once he had made a judgement of a person, either
as scientist or administrator, he could not be influenced. Moreover,
he did not like being crossed in a major way and did not find
it easy to overlook the matter afterwards. In fact, it sometimes
led to misunderstood records of subsequent events or discussions.
However, one must not allow this evidence of human fault to diminish
the consequences of the attainments of the man.
Honours and awards
Learned societies, professional bodies and academic institutions
honoured Wark by awards of various kinds throughout his career.
Imperial honours crowned his career, first by appointment as Commander
of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1964,
then appointment as Companion of the Most Distinguished Order
of St Michael and St George (CMG) in 1967 and finally creation
as Knight Bachelor in 1969. He derived great pleasure from all
these awards and honours.
Those falling to him in the final years of his life were particularly
precious to him, namely, the International Symposium on the Principles
of Mineral Flotation held in his honour in 1983; the naming of
the Ian Wark Laboratories in the CSIRO complex at Clayton; and
the renaming of the lecture hall in the Ellerton Becker Building
of the Australian Academy of Science as the Ian Wark Theatre.
Since his death and in recognition of his contribution to science
and industry the Academy has inaugurated the Ian William Wark
Medal and Lecture.
A.L.G. Rees,CBE, FAA, former Chief of the CSIRO Division of Chemical Physics.
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