Jay Bailey

{{short description|American chemical engineer (1944–2001)}}

{{Infobox scientist

| image = James E. Bailey 1986.png

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| caption = James E. Bailey in 1986

|birth_name = James Edward Bailey

| birth_date = {{Birth-date|1944}}

| birth_place = Texas, U.S.

| death_date = {{Death date and age|2001|05|09|1944|df=yes}}

| death_place = Zurich, Switzerland

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| fields = Chemical engineering

| workplaces = ETH Zurich

| alma_mater = Rice University

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| doctoral_advisor = Fritz Horn

| academic_advisors =

| doctoral_students =

| notable_students = Douglas S. Clark
Chaitan Khosla

| known_for = metabolic engineering

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| spouse = {{marriage|Frances Arnold|1987|1991|reason=divorced}}

}}

James Edward Bailey (1944 – 9 May 2001), generally known as Jay Bailey, was an American pioneer of biochemical engineering, particularly metabolic engineering. In a special issue of a journal dedicated to his work, the editor said "Jay was one of biochemical engineering's most creative thinkers and spirited advocates, a true innovator who played an enormous role in establishing biochemical engineering as the dynamic discipline it is today".D. S. Clark (2002) Biotechnology and Bioengineering vol 79, no 5, page 483 "In Appreciation:James E. Bailey, 1944–2001" His numerous contributions in biotechnology and metabolic engineering have led to multiple awards including the First Merck Award in Metabolic Engineering.Gregory Stephanopoulos (2001) Metabolic Engineering vol 3, 393–394 "In Memoriam, Jay Bailey 1944-2001"

He is commemorated in the James E. Bailey Award for Outstanding Contributions to the Field of Biological Engineering,[http://www.aiche.org/SBE/About/Awards.aspx James E. Bailey Award for Biological Engineering] by the AIChE Society for Biological Engineering.

Life

Bailey was the only child of Jim and Doris Bailey, growing up in Rockford, Illinois.{{cite book |last=Balnch |first=Harvey |date=2016 |title=Memorial Tributes Vol 20 |url=https://www.nap.edu/read/23394/chapter/6#27 |publisher=National Academies Press |pages=26–29 |isbn=978-0-309-43729-5 }} He studied chemical engineering at Rice University receiving a BA in 1966 and PhD in 1969 working with Fritz Horn. He worked for Shell then taught chemical engineering at the University of Houston starting in 1971 before moving to Caltech in 1980 before becoming Professor of Biotechnology at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zurich in 1992. Jay died of cancer 9 May 2001.

He was married to fellow chemical engineer Frances Arnold and had a son, James Howard Bailey (born in 1990) with her. He has another son, Sean Bailey, an American film and television producer who has been the president of Walt Disney Studios Motion Picture Production since his appointment in 2010 until 2024.

References

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Further reading

  • Biotechnology and Bioengineering (2002) Vol 79 issue 5: Special Issue: A Tribute to Jay Bailey (Wiley Interscience) Contains reprints of 6 important papers by Jay Bailey selected by the editors.
  • Vassily Hatzimanikatis & James C. Liao (2002) Biotechnology and Bioengineering vol 79 no 5, pp 504–508 "A Memorial Review of Jay Bailey's Contribution in Prokaryotic Metabolic Engineering" [https://web.archive.org/web/20120224194704/http://systemsbiology.northwestern.edu/papers/Hatzimanikatis-B%26B-2002-A_Memorial_Review.pdf]
  • K. F. Reardon et al. (2002) Biotechnology and Bioengineering vol 79 no 5, pp 484–489 "Jay Bailey as a Mentor - The Students' Perspective" [https://web.archive.org/web/20120224194709/http://systemsbiology.northwestern.edu/papers/Reardon-B%26B-2002-Jay_Bailey_As.pdf]
  • J. E. Bailey & D. F. Ollis (1986) Biochemical Engineering Fundamentals 2nd ed., McGraw-Hill, {{ISBN|0-07-066601-6}}
  • J. E. Bailey (2001) Nature Biotechnology 19 503-504 "Complex biology with no parameters" (published just after his death)

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Category:American chemical engineers

Category:Academic staff of ETH Zurich

Category:Rice University alumni

Category:University of Houston faculty

Category:California Institute of Technology faculty

Category:1944 births

Category:2001 deaths

Category:20th-century American engineers

Category:20th-century American chemists