Nollet studied humanities at the Collège de Clermont in
Beauvais, starting in 1715. He completed a master's degree in the Faculty of Theology at the University of Paris in 1724. He was ordained a deacon in the Catholic Church in 1728, but suspended his clerical career. This association gave Nollet the opportunity to come into contact with important natural philosophers. In particular, it is likely that he came into contact with
Du Fay and
Réaumur, two leading members of the
Royal Academy of Sciences. Nollet assisted them with experiments in a wide variety of topics (e.g., anatomy of insects, fertilization of frogs, thermometry, pneumatics, phosphorescence, magnetism, and electricity) from about 1731 to 1735. In the period from 1731 to 1733, Nollet assisted Du Fay, especially with electrical experiments, and travelled with du Fay in 1734 to meet physicists in England and in 1736 to the Netherlands. He was a member of the
Royal Society of
London from 1734. He is reputed to have given the name to the
Leyden jar after it was invented by
Pieter van Musschenbroek. To finance his own experimental instruments, Nollet started building and selling duplicate instruments in 1735. From at least 1743, the
Royal Academy of Sciences identified Nollet as the person who was particularly in charge of research about electricity. In 1753 he became the first professor of experimental physics in France, at the
collège de Navarre,
University of Paris. Nollet held lectures aimed to popularise physics with the use of instruments. These lectures, collected together and published as
Leçons de physique expérimentale and
L’Art des expériences, continued to inspire self-taught scientists through the 19th century. ==Scientific work==