Tang was born on 18 November 1915 in
Yixing,
Jiangsu,
Republic of China. He entered the Department of Chemistry of
Peking University in the summer of 1936. When the
Second Sino-Japanese War broke out in 1937, Beijing came under Japanese attack and Peking University, together with
Tsinghua and
Nankai universities, evacuated to
Kunming in Southwest China. In Kunming, the universities combined their diminished resources to form the temporary
National Southwestern Associated University, where Tang continued his studies. After graduating in 1940, he was hired by the university as a faculty member. After the end of
World War II, Tang was sent to the United States in 1946 to study
nuclear physics, together with
Tsung-Dao Lee, who would win the Nobel Prize in 1957, and other distinguished scientists. However, Sino-American relations deteriorated after the
Chinese Civil War broke out, and Tang studied chemistry at
Columbia University instead of nuclear physics. After earning his Ph.D. from Columbia in 1949, Tang returned to the newly established
People's Republic of China in early 1950 and became a professor of Peking University. In 1952, he moved to
Changchun to help establish
Jilin University (initially called the Northeast People's University). He founded the university's Department of Chemistry, and served as Vice President of the university from 1956. After the
Cultural Revolution, he served as President of Jilin University from 1978 to 1986, and as President Emeritus afterwards until his death. He was elected a founding member of the
Chinese Academy of Sciences in 1955 and a member of the
International Academy of Quantum Molecular Science (IAQMS) in 1981. == Scientific contributions ==