Eugène Auguste Nicolas Millon (24 April 1812 – 22 October 1867) was a French chemist and physician. He is remembered in the name of Millon's reagent which reacts with tyrosine in proteins to form a brown precipitate. The reagent is used for determination of the presence of soluble proteins.
Millon was born in Saint-Seine-l'Abbaye and after his education, he taught briefly at the Collège Rollin after before training in medicine at the military hospital at Val-de-Grâce from 1832 to 1835. After serving for a while in the army he left surgery to study pharmacy and chemistry and became a pharmacist in 1838, serving from 1850 to 1865 in Algeria. His most well-known contribution was the reaction of mercury and nitric acid with egg albumen which produces a white precipitate that turns red on heating. His other contributions were on compounds of chlorine and iodine including the acids. He examined salts in blood.
An Algerian stamp commemorating him was released in 1954.
References
- Wisniak, J. (2020). "Auguste-Nicolas-Eugene Millon, Millon reagent, chlorine derivatives, and blood". Revista CENIC Ciencias Químicas. 51 (2): 337–352.
- Malangeau, Pierre (1968). "L'œuvre scientifique d'Eugène Millon". Revue d'Histoire de la Pharmacie Année (in French): 73–82.
- Anon (1870). E. Millon, sa vie, ses travaux de chimie et ses études économiques et agricole sur l'Algérie (in French). Paris: J.B. Bailliere et fils.
- Davidson, S. M. (1973). "Professional Standards Review Organizations". Journal of the American Medical Association. 226 (9): 1106–1108. doi:10.1001/jama.1973.03230090030006.