During the
First World War, Hinshelwood was a
chemist in an
explosives factory. He was a
tutor at
Trinity College, Oxford, from 1921 to 1937 and was
Dr Lee's Professor of Chemistry at the
University of Oxford from 1937. He served on several advisory councils on scientific matters to the
British Government. His early studies of molecular
kinetics led to the publication of
Thermodynamics for Students of Chemistry and
The Kinetics of Chemical Change in 1926. With
Harold Warris Thompson he studied the explosive reaction of
hydrogen and
oxygen and described the phenomenon of
chain reaction. His subsequent work on chemical changes in the bacterial cell proved to be of great importance in later research work on
antibiotics and therapeutic agents, and his book,
The Chemical Kinetics of the Bacterial Cell was published in 1946, followed by
Growth, Function and Regulation in Bacterial Cells in 1966. In 1951 he published
The Structure of Physical Chemistry. It was republished as an Oxford Classic Texts in the Physical Sciences by Oxford University Press in 2005. The
Langmuir-Hinshelwood process in heterogeneous catalysis, in which the adsorption of the reactants on the surface is the rate-limiting step, is named after him. He was a senior research fellow at
Imperial College London from 1964 to 1967. ==Awards and honours==