Dr. Battino has published more than 90 research
papers, primarily on the thermodynamics of solutions. He has also
edited three volumes of gas solubility data (Nitrogen and Air, Oxygen and Ozone, and the updated volume on Oxygen and Ozone) for the IUPAC Solubility Data Series. With S.E.
Wood, Battino has co-authored an introductory text and an advanced monograph
on chemical thermodynamics.
Lectures include:
The High-Precision Solubility of Gases in Water
A FUN Approach to Thermodynamics
(multimedia presentation for chemistry and general audiences)
“Mysteries” of the First and Second Laws of Thermodynamics
Thermodynamics Works! Enthalpy and Heat Capacity Changes on Solution from Gas Solubility Data
Correlations Involving the Solubility of Gases in Water
Dr. Battino has published more than 80
papers on chemical education and has been presenting 15 or more 90-minute
shows for school children every year for more than 40 years. (See videos.)
Lectures include:
Interesting and FUN Ways to Teach at University
This motivational talk covers:
The importance of the opening lecture
Eccentricity
Expectations
Whimbey pairs
The three-minute essay
Modeling
Being polite
The use of skits
Participatory demonstrations
. . . and more
Interesting and FUN Ways to Teach Chemistry
Similar to the previous talk, but with examples taken mainly from chemistry.
A FUN Approach to Thermodynamics
A multimedia lecture using a dramatic reading, a skit, a movie, audio
tape, and simple relevant demonstrations.
Along with professional model makers H.R. DuFour and J.D.
Arehart, Dr. Battino has edited a book entitled An Oral History of Charles E. Taylor, the Wright Brothers’
Mechanician. The book is derived from interviews with people who knew
or were related to Taylor, the man who built the Wright Brothers’ engines.
The research Battino did for this book (available from the Archives Department in the Wright State University Library) and his long tenure at Wright
State have made him knowledgeable about the history of
early flight, especially those aspects centering on the Wright Brothers.
He offers two 60- to 90-minute illustrated talks on the following subjects:
The Genius of the Wright Brothers and the Construction of an Accurate
Full-scale Replica of the 1903 Flyer
In addition to recounting personal histories of the Wright Brothers
and their families, Dr. Battino will present material showing how scientific
the Wrights were in their approach to flying, even fabricating wind
tunnels and other aerodynamic testing apparatus in their bicycle shop.
He will also detail what he learned by helping to construct a replica
of the 1903 Wright Flyer. Along with DuFour and Arehart, Battino
received a grant to construct the full-scale replica, which now hangs
in the atrium of the Wright State University library. The story of this
project provides unmatched insight into the Wright Brothers’ procedures.
The Three Who Flew at Kitty Hawk: Charlie Taylor and the
Wright Brothers’ Engines
Charles E. Taylor was the mechanical genius who built — in 30
working days — the engine that powered the Flyer in 1903. Using
numerous original slides, Dr. Battino will discuss the design and construction
of the engine, along with interesting material from Taylor’s life. This
talk includes a section entitled “the Flight of the Vin Fiz,”
the fascinating story of Calbraith Perry Rodgers, the first man to fly
across the United States. Taylor was Rodgers’s mechanician for this historic
flight, which he made in 1911 to win a prize of $50,000 offered by William
Randolph Hearst. Rodgers ultimately did not win the prize, but he made
aviation history.